Spotted towhee
The spotted towhee is a large New World sparrow. The taxonomy of the towhees has been debated in recent decades, and until 1995 this bird and the eastern towhee were considered a single species, then named rufous-sided towhee. Another outdated name for the spotted towhee is the Oregon towhee. The call may be harsher and more varied than for the eastern towhee.
Description
The spotted towhee is a large New World sparrow, roughly the same size as a gray catbird. It has a long, dark, fan-shaped tail with white corners on the end. It has a round body with bright red eyes and dull pink legs. The spotted towhee is between and long, and weighs in at between and. It has a wingspan of.Adult males have a generally darker head, upper body and tail with a white belly, rufous sides, white spots on their back and white wing bars. Females look similar but are dark brown and grey instead of black. The spotted towhee has white spots on its primary and secondary feathers; the eastern towhee is the same in terms of its size and structure but does not have white spots, though does have a white base on the primary feathers, absent in spotted towhee.
Distribution and habitat
The spotted towhee lives in dry upland forests, open forests, brushy fields, and chaparrals. It breeds across north-western North America and is present year-round in California, Nevada, Arizona, Utah, Oregon, Washington, Idaho and southern British Columbia. It is not found in arid climates and as a result does not reside in the Sonoran Desert, but resides in northern Arizona and the entirety of California except the southeast corner that borders Arizona. It has also been known to expand as far eastward as western Iowa and southwestern Minnesota. It also occurs in fringe wetland forests and riparian forests near the border of upland forests. Because the spotted towhee's habitat overlaps with areas of the United States that experience regular forest fires, it tends to be found in unburned chaparral and avoids chaparral and forests which have been burned due to lack of ground cover and minimal foraging ability. Spotted towhees will be present in an area that is recovering after a burn, due to excellent ground cover and ease of ground foraging from the recovering understory vegetation, although populations will decrease after a forest fire until the vegetation has grown back.Its breeding habitat in the southwest is largely dependent on coastal sage scrub, as it provides cover from predators. It migrates to northern and northwestern United States and southwestern Canada to breed in scrubland, parks and suburban gardens. Northwestern birds migrate eastwards to the central plains of the United States, mostly the northwestern-central Great Plains. In other areas, some birds may move to lower elevations in the winter. Their breeding habitat is chaparral, thickets or shrubby areas across western North America. Spotted towhee hybridizes with eastern towhee where their ranges overlap in the Midwest, and with collared towhee where their ranges overlap in southwestern Mexico.
Taxonomy
A total of 21 subspecies are accepted:- Pipilo maculatus oregonus
- Pipilo maculatus falcifer
- Pipilo maculatus megalonyx
- Pipilo maculatus clementae
- Pipilo maculatus umbraticola
- Pipilo maculatus consobrinus
- Pipilo maculatus magnirostris
- Pipilo maculatus curtatus
- Pipilo maculatus falcinellus
- Pipilo maculatus arcticus
- Pipilo maculatus montanus
- Pipilo maculatus gaigei
- Pipilo maculatus griseipygius
- Pipilo maculatus orientalis
- Pipilo maculatus maculatus
- Pipilo maculatus vulcanorum
- Pipilo maculatus oaxacae
- Pipilo maculatus chiapensis
- Pipilo maculatus repetens
- Pipilo maculatus macronyx
- Pipilo maculatus socorroensis
Behavior
Breeding and nesting
They nest either on the ground or low in bushes, seldom more than above the ground and most nests are around above the ground. The location for the nests is usually found in exposed areas, but conceal the nest as it is being built. The female builds the nest over a period of about five days. It is bulky and sturdily made of leaves, strips of bark, twigs, forb stalks, and grasses, lined with pine needles, shredded bark, grass, and sometimes hair. It is usually in diameter with an inner ring of to. The nests are built so the rim is at ground level and the nest is deep.At least two broods, consisting of three to five eggs, are laid per season. The egg shells are grayish or creamy-white, sometimes with a tinge of green, with reddish brown spots that can form a wreath or cap. The eggs are slightly oblong, with their dimensions being to long and to wide. The female incubates the eggs alone for 12 to 14 days; the young leave the nest at 10 to 12 days. Nests are parasitized by cowbirds.