Thick-billed fox sparrow
The thick-billed fox sparrow group comprises the peculiarly large-billed Sierra Nevadan taxa in the genus Passerella. It is currently classified as a "subspecies group" within the fox sparrow, pending wider-spread acceptance of its species status.
These birds were long considered members of the slate-colored fox sparrow group due to morphological characteristics, but according to mtDNA cytochrome b sequence and haplotype data, it forms a recognizable clade. Research on suspected hybridization and considering additional DNA sequence data led to confirmation of their distinctiveness ; this group appears to be most closely related to the sooty and/or slate-colored fox sparrows.
Thick-billed fox sparrows are almost identical in plumage to slate-colored fox sparrows but have a more extensive blue-gray hood and a less rusty tail. The most striking feature of this bird is its enormous beak which can appear to be three times as large as that of the markedly small-billed slate-colored fox sparrows. A thick-billed fox sparrow's beak also differs in color from that of the slate-colored. Although the culmens of both groups are grayish brown, slate-coloreds have yellow lower mandibles instead of the steel blue of the thick-billeds'.