General
Rufous-crowned Sparrow: Medium-sized sparrow with gray-brown upperparts streaked with red-brown; underparts are gray. Head has rufous crown, gray face, rufous eye-line, and thick, black moustache stripe. Wings are brown and lack bars. Tail is long and rounded. Sexes are similar. Juvenile has brown crown and streaks on breast and flanks.
Range and Habitat
Rufous-crowned Sparrow: Resident from California, southern Arizona, and southern New Mexico east to Texas and central Oklahoma. Inhabits open oak woodlands and dry uplands with grassy vegetation and bushes, often near rocky outcrops.
Listen to Call
Voice Text
"chip-chip", "deer"
Interesting Facts
The Rufous-crowned Sparrow was described in 1852 by John Cassin as Ammodramus ruficeps. It is also known as the Rock Sparrow because of its preference to live on rocky slopes.
The derivation of the current genus name, Aimophila, is from aimos, 'thicket' and phila, 'loving'. Its species name is a literal derivation of its common name, derived from the Latin words rufus 'rufous' and -ceps, from caput 'head'.
Male sparrows maintain and defend their territories throughout the year.
A group of sparrows has many collective nouns, including a "crew", "flutter", "meinie", "quarrel", and "ubiquity" of sparrows.
Author
Gary Owen Dick
Related Birds
Chipping Sparrow
Cassin's Sparrow
Green-tailed Towhee
Olive Sparrow
American Tree Sparrow
Rufous-winged Sparrow
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