Search

Swamp Sparrow Song

Barbara Ballentine, a postdoctoral fellow with the Smithsonian Migratory Bird Center, is investigating the differences in song between two subspecies of the swamp sparrow.

The inland subspecies, which breed across Canada and in the Appalachians, tends to have a more musical and complicated song than its relative that breeds from coastal New Jersey to Delaware. In the sonagrams below, which are a visual representation of the songs, note the thicker and longer lines of the inland songs. These are likely more difficult to sing.

The differences in song may be attributable to a difference in bill size. Coastal birds tend to have larger bills and may have a more difficult time maneuvering their bills quickly to sing a complicated, musical song.

Genetic studies indicate that the subspecies of swamp sparrows have been separated for about 10,000 years. In addition to the differences in bill size, coastal birds also tend to be darker in plumage and have a different nesting strategy. They may be evolving into different species.

Below are two examples of inland songs and three examples of coastal songs. As you listen to them, can you hear any differences?

Inland Songs

 

Coastal Songs

 

Did you know that female swamp sparrows chatter every time they leave the nest? This would seem to be a dead giveaway to any nest predators. Find out why they do this.

Publications (14)

Greenberg, R.S. and Droege, S. Adaptations to tidal marshes in breeding populations of the swamp sparrow, Condor, 92 393-404. 1990.

Peele, A.M., Burtt Jr., E.H., Schroeder, M.R. and Greenberg, R.S. Dark color of the coastal plain swamp sparrow (Melospiza georgiana nigrescens) may be an evolutionary response to occurrence and abundance of salt-tolerant feather-degrading bacilli in its plumage, The Auk, 126 (3) 531-535. 2009.

Greenberg, R.S. Differences in neophobia between naive song and swamp sparrows, Ethology, 91 17-24. 1992.

Beadell, J., Greenberg, R.S., Droege, S. and Royle, J.A. Distribution, abundance, and habitat affinities of the Coastal Plain Swamp Sparrow, Wilson Bulletin, 115 (1) 38-44. 2003.

Olsen, B., Greenberg, R.S., Fleischer, R. and Walters, J. Extrapair paternity in the swamp sparrow, Melospiza georgiana: Male access or female preference?, Behavioural Ecology and Sociobiology, 63 (2) 285-294. 2008.

Greenberg, R.S. Innate response to a single habitat cue in song and swamp sparrows, Oecologia, 92 299-300. 1992.

Liu, I.A., Lohr, B., Olsen, B. and Greenberg, R.S. Macrogeographic Vocal Variation in Subspecies of Swamp Sparrow, Condor, 110 (1) 102-109. 2008.

Greenberg, R.S., Cordero, P., Droege, S. and Fleischer, F. Morphological adaptation in the absence of mitochondrial DNA variation in the coastal plain swamp sparrow, Auk, 115 706-712. 1998.

Greenberg, R.S. Neophobia, aversion to open space, and ecological plasticity in Song and Swamp sparrows, Canadian journal of zoology, 67 1194-1199. 1989.

Greenberg, R.S. Seasonal plumage dimorphism in the swamp Sparrow, Journal of Field Ornithology, 50 49-54. 1988.

Greenberg, R.S., Marra, P.P. and Wooler, M. Stable isotope (C, N, H) analyses locate the unknown winter range of the coastal plain swamp sparrow (Melospiza georgiana nigrescens), The Auk, 124 1137-1148. 2007.

Greenberg, R.S., Olsen, B., Ballentine, B., Warner, S. and Danner, R. Temporal distribution of the Coastal Plain Swamp Sparrow: The importance of subspecies identification, Birding, 40 42-49. 2008.

Ballentine, B. The ability to perform physically challenging songs predicts age and size in male swamp sparrows, Melospiza georgiana, Animal Behaviour, 77 973-978. 2009.

Greenberg, R.S. The use of nest departure calls for surveying Swamp Sparrows, Journal of Field Ornithology, 74 (1) 12-16. 2003.

Page Controls