click on the photo
for a larger view
|
Dark-eyed (Oregon) Junco
[Junco hyemalis oreganus]
[Length 6.25 in. Wingspan 9.25 in.]
Except for the pink bill, white belly, and white outer tail feathers, the Dark-eyed Junco has a considerable amount of variation in its plumage across its wide range (throughout Canada and much of the US).
Each of these plumage variations was formerly considered a separate species.
The birds in the east were called Slate-colored Juncos.
They are a dark, slate-color above and on the upper breast and throat.
The birds along the edges of western coniferous forests were called Pink-sided Juncos.
They have a light gray head, throat, and upper breast, with a brownish wash on the back and light salmon along the sides.
The birds of the moist western coniferous forests were called Oregon Juncos.
They have a dark head, throat, and upper breast, but are a chestnut-brown color on the back, with a wash of lighter brown along the sides.
Birds in the Rocky Mountains were called Gray-headed Juncos.
They look like a cross between the Slate-colored and Oregon Juncos, having a lighter gray head, throat, and upper breast, with a brownish back.
A very small population of White-winged Juncos in the Black Hills of western South Dakota and eastern Wyoming are like the Slate-colored Juncos, but show faint white wingbars.
The bird pictured is an Oregon Junco.
This one was photographed in the foothills of coastal California, USA.
Photo taken with a Nikkor 300mm EDAF f4 lens on Kodachrome 200 film.
(Date: November 1997)
(use image name "junco4" for inquiries)
|