General
American Pipit: Small pipit with gray-brown upperparts and pale buff underparts; breast is faintly to darkly streaked. Tail is dark with white edges. Bill is thin and long. Sexes are similar. Winter adult is browner. A walking ground dweller that bobs its tail continually.
Range and Habitat
American Pipit: Breeds from northern Alaska, Mackenzie, Canadian Arctic islands, and Newfoundland, south in mountains to California, New Mexico, and northern New Hampshire. Spends winters across the southern states and north to British Columbia and southern New England. Preferred habitats include Arctic and alpine tundra, beaches, barren fields, agricultural lands, and golf courses.
Listen to Call
Voice Text
"chee-chee-chee", "cheedal-cheedal-cheedal", "pip"
Interesting Facts
The American Pipit was long known as the Water Pipit. Recent studies have shown that the three North American subspecies, along with the most eastern Asiatic one, are best regarded as a distinct species.
The absence of a breeding species of pipits in the open country of the eastern United States is due to the fact that until recently forests covered this area.
They feed on insects on the edges of tundra puddles, and in alpine meadows they visit unmelted snowbanks. Warm air rising from valleys below transports insects to high altitudes; most of these die and are frozen in snowbanks, providing food for the pipits.
Global warming may allow these birds to winter farther north than previously, but it also may reduce and fragment existing breeding areas.
Author
Gary Owen Dick
Related Birds
California Towhee
Brown Shrike
Chestnut-collared Longspur
Sprague's Pipit
Red-throated Pipit
McCown's Longspur
Lapland Longspur
Smith's Longspur
Canyon Towhee
Lanceolated Warbler
Horned Lark
Pechora Pipit
Olive-backed Pipit
Sky Lark
Abert's Towhee
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