Henslow's Sparrow

Henslow's Sparrow
[Henslow's Sparrow - Photo by John Cassady]

The Henslow's Sparrow (Ammodramus henslowii) has been identified as a focal species due to a decline in its range-wide breeding population estimated at an average annual rate of -7.5% since the mid-1960s. A small, inconspicuous grassland bird, this sparrow has suffered primarily from the drainage and degradation of natural grasslands, habitat loss to suburban development, and the conversion of hay fields and pastures to cultivated crops. Other factors impacting this species include suppression of natural fire regimes needed to maintain grasslands and the frequent mowing of grasslands for hay production that greatly reduces breeding success. Its winter range and ecology remain poorly known, although one recent study suggests these sparrows may have very specific habitat requirements during winter that could also be a factor regulating population size.

Date: March 2008

Sources:
Herkert, James R., Peter D. Vickery, and Donald E. Kroodsma. 2002. Henslow's Sparrow (Ammodramus henslowii). In: The Birds of North America Online (A. Poole, Ed.). Ithaca: Cornell Lab of Ornithology; retrieved from the Birds of North America Online: http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/672.

Plentovich, S., N. R. Holler and G. E. Hill. 1999. Habitat requirements of Henslow's Sparrows wintering in silvacultural lands of the gulf coastal plain. Auk 116: 109-115.

Species Profile from NatureServe

Henslow's Sparrow
Ammodramus henslowii

Description:

ADULTS: Characterized by large flat head, large gray bill, and short tail. The head, nape, and most of the central crown stripe are olive-colored, with the wings extensively dark chestnut. The breast is finely streaked. When flushed, the bird flies low and jerkily, with a twisting motion of the tail. Otherwise, it is shy and secretive, with its presence most often revealed by its song (Peterson 1980, National Geographic Society 1987). The sexes have similar appearances. A cloacal protuberance (male) and brood patch (female) are reliable indicators of sex for living birds in the hand during the period from May through September (Pyle et al. 1987).

JUVENILES: Juveniles are clay-colored above and streaked on the head and back with black. Below, a faint yellow with tinges of buff on the chin and throat. The sides of the throat are typically unstreaked although occasional streaking may occur (Roberts 1949).

EGGS: The eggs are approximately 18.3 x 14.4 mm in size (Graber 1968) and are white with spots or blotches of brown, mostly at the larger end.

NESTS: Nests can be either open or domed and they are located from 0-50 cm above the litter (Hyde 1939, Robins 1971, Flanigan 1975). Those nests that are off the ground are attached to grass or forb stalks. Hyde (1939) describes a "typical" domed nest in southern Michigan as being located at the base of a clump of grass with dead grass from the clump forming an arched roof over the nest. The single entrance is located at an oblique angle on the side of the nest. Occasionally a nest is placed in a depression in the ground (Johnsgard 1979), but most are at least two cm above the substrate. The nest is loosely woven with dead grass and lined with finer grasses and hair.

VOCALIZATIONS: The song is distinctive and diagnostic: a short, quiet "see-lick," accented on the second syllable (Peterson 1980, National Geographic Society 1987). Sometimes sings on quiet nights, Given this bird's secretive nature, an ability to identify its song is essential for reliable census and survey work.

Life History: Two broods of young per breeding season (Hyde 1939), perhaps three (Robins 1971), are raised. The female does most or all of the nest-building, taking five to six days to complete the process. Clutch size is from three to five eggs. First clutches are normally completed by 20-30 May in the central part of the range (Hyde 1939, Graber 1968). Second nests are initiated in July and August with some extending into September (Robins 1971). Only the female incubates the eggs and broods the young. The incubation period lasts about 11 days and the young stay in the nest nine to ten days. Females make most of the feeding trips during the first four or five days of the nestling period and about 50% of the trips during the latter half (Robins 1971). Young are tended by both parents, leave nest at 9-10 days.
Of the 11 nests found in a southern Michigan brome hayfield, six (54.5%) produced at least one young (Robins 1971). Only one of the 11 nests (9.1%) successfully raised all of the young. Seventeen young were produced from a total of 46 eggs (37.0%).

Habitat:

BREEDING: Open fields and meadows with grass interspersed with weeds or shrubby vegetation, especially in damp or low-lying areas, adjacent to salt marsh in some areas. Uses unmowed hayfields (abandoned if cut). Found in a variety of habitats that contain tall, dense grass and herbaceous vegetation (Smith 1968, 1992). Hyde (1939) describes a variety of preferred habitats: upland weedy hayfields or pastures without shrubs, wet meadows, drier areas of saltmarshes, grassy fields, and sedgy hillsides with recently planted pine seedlings (PINUS spp.). Graber (1968) found that their habitat was usually quite dense from 30-61 cm off the ground and reported them to be "adapted" to unmowed hayfields. In New York, Peterson (1983) found them in large, ungrazed fields, often on hilltops, with a variety of moisture regimes and no woody invasion. They are not typically associated with grazed areas (Peterson 1983, Zimmerman 1988), although they can survive quite well in pastures that are only lightly (Skinner 1975) or moderately (Smith and Smith 1990) grazed.
Wiens (1969), in his three year study, found four territories in the first and third years and none in the second year. He found that territories had a low percent cover of forbs, dense vegetation, a high effective vegetation height, little bare ground or low vegetation, and no trees, posts, or fence lines.
In eastern part of range, are reported in "...moist upland meadows not under the plow, grown up to clumps of ferns, tall meadow rue (THALICTRUM spp.), and scattered shrubbery" in Vermont (Kibbe and Laughlin 1985); "...in small swales, meadows or other moist grassy lands...in fields of heavy timothy or clover" in Massachusetts (Forbush 1929); and "...in grassy fields and meadows with scattered bushes and herbaceous plants, both in wet and dry situations" in New York (Bull 1974). In addition to the above types of habitats, occurrences have been reported in wet meadows vegetated by sedges (CAREX spp.), rushes (SCIRPUS spp.) and grasses, in fields of seedling pines, and in drier upland portions of saltmarshes in the Northeast (Craig 1979).
Along the Atlantic Coast, the birds probably nested on the edges of saltmarshes before the arrival of Europeans (Hyde 1939, Craig 1979). In West Virginia, Hall (1983) reports that Henslow's sparrows "...prefer fields with growths of orchard grass [DACTYLIS GLOMERATA] or a rank weedy growth." Birds in Maryland have occurred chiefly in broomsedge (CAREX SCOPARIA) fields and weedy sedge meadows, and occasionally in hayfields (Stewart and Robbins 1958). Near Louisville, Kentucky, "...exclusively in or near fields largely or wholly composed of the orchard grass much raised locally as a crop, and has preferred the crop fields to patches of untended grass" (Mengel 1965). In Kentucky, Mengel (1965) noted that the sparrow often occurred in association with sedge wrens (CISTOTHORUS PLATENSIS) and in dry, upland sites that were in marked contrast to the marshy, meadow habitats considered typical habitat by Hyde (1939).
In the Midwest and Great Plains regions, formerly bred in tallgrass prairie interspersed with forbs and shrubs. Where tallgrass prairie persists, J. Zimmerman (pers. comm.) reports that they still use it for nesting habitat in Kansas and Missouri. At present, typical breeding habitat includes neglected grassy fields, pastures and meadows with scattered shrubby vegetation, or hayfields with dense cover, usually in damp or low-lying areas (Whitney et al. 1978, Johnsgard 1979, AOU 1983). Bajema et al. (2001) document extensive use of grasslands on reclaimed coal mines in southwestern Indiana, and estimated a density of 0.16 males per hectare, suggesting an overall population of 'a few thousand' in the mine grasslands of southwestern Indiana.
In a brome grass/alfalfa/red clover hayfield in southwestern Michigan, they bred in areas with an intermediate moisture range, a continuous cover of grasses and sedges about 0.8 m high, occasional shrubs, mostly less than 0.9 m high, and accumulated litter (no data on litter depth or percent coverage) (Robins 1971).
Fall and Eliason (1982) located a nest in Hennepin County, Minnesota, at the top of a knoll in an old field. Timothy comprised about 80% of the biomass of the 0.5 m-high vegetation. Except for a few shrubs approximately 0.5 m-high, there was no woody vegetation within 100 m, the vegetation covered about 75% of the soil surface, and there was a complete litter layer up to five cm deep.
Wiens (1969) compared the vegetation structure at nests with the vegetation in unoccupied areas in Fitchburg, Wisconsin. Occupied areas had significantly lower coverage and density of forbs, especially broad-leaved types, and the forb height was significantly greater (occupied average height = 27 cm). In occupied areas, the vertical vegetation density was higher and the litter was deeper and covered a higher percentage of the soil surface (average depth = 4.3 cm, 93% coverage).
Nest is well-hidden in grass, either at base of grass tuft (usually) or to 40 cm up in stems of growing herbage.
NON-BREEDING: In migration and winter also occurs in grassy areas adjacent to pine woods or second-growth woods. No detailed descriptions or studies of the habitat requirements of the winter range are available.

Distribution:

United States: AL, AR, CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, IA, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, MA, MD, MI, MN, MO, MS, NC, NE, NH, NJ, NY, OH, OK, PA, RI (extirpated), SC, SD, TN, TX (extirpated), VA, VT, WI, WV
Canada: ON, QC

Status:

NatureServe Status: Global Status: G4, Global Status Last Reviewed: 04Dec1996, Global Status Last Changed: 04Dec1996, Rounded Global Status: G4 - Apparently Secure
Other Statuses: Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in Canada (COSEWIC): Endangered (01Nov2000), IUCN Red List Category: NT - Near threatened

Resources: NatureServe Species Profile - Full Report

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Taxonomy Helper

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SOURCE: Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS)

Henslow's Sparrow

    Kingdom: Animalia
    Phylum: Chordata
    Subphylum: Vertebrata
    Class: Aves
    Order: Passeriformes
    Family: Emberizidae
    Genus: Ammodramus
    Species: Ammodramus henslowii

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