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Chondestes grammacus L 6 1/2" (17 cm).
Song or calls:
Listen (NGPC audio) Repeated “tsip.” Song includes various trills interspersed with low “churr”
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photo by Phil Swanson
Description: Sexes similar. Distinctive head pattern: chestnut ear patches and crown striping bordered in black and white. Mottled brown upperparts; grayish-white underparts marked only with dark central breast spot. Black tail has white corners and outer tail feathers. Juvenile has streaked crown, breast, and sides; lacks head pattern of adult.
Behavior: The male sings constantly both day and night, from the ground, a wire, or a fence post.
 Habitat: Open woodlands, roadsides, farmlands, and native grasslands and weedy fields that are scattered with trees and shrubs.
Where in Nebraska: Common spring and fall migrant across the state. Common summer resident in grasslands throughout Nebraska, but especially in Sandhills and Panhandle.
Fun Facts: Walks on the ground rather than hops, like many other sparrows
(click image for larger view)
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