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Bird of the Year – 2017
Grasshopper Sparrow
Wake Audubon’s 2017 Bird of the Year
The Grasshopper Sparrow, Ammodramus savannarum, is so named because it does eat grasshoppers, as well as other insects that it finds while foraging in grassy places. Its song also reminds us of the buzzy sound of grasshoppers. It is primarily a bird of large tracts of grasslands, and is rarely found in suburbs or urban areas. It has been seen in Wake County in the agricultural fields along Mid Pines Road, in the grassy areas at Anderson Point, Prairie Ridge and Horseshoe Farm Nature Park. The Grasshopper Sparrow’s conservation status is listed as a common bird in steep decline. Its population during the Breeding Birds Surveys declined by 75% between 1966 and 2014. In North Carolina it is mainly a spring and summer resident, except in the coastal plain, where you can find it in the winter.
Here are some characteristics to look for in trying to identify this bird. They are pale and have no streaking on their breasts. They are small sparrows with proportionately large heads and short tails. They will be foraging on the ground. During the spring their song is quite distinctive, two short notes, followed by a long buzzing sound. Click on this link to hear it.
Bird of the Year Archives
- 2023 American Goldfinch
- 2022- Wood Thrush
- 2021-The Eastern Towhee
- 2020-The Red-headed Woodpecker
- 2019 – The Red-shouldered Hawk
- 2018 – The Brown Thrasher
- 2017 – The Grasshopper Sparrow
- 2016 – The Field Sparrow
- 2015 – The Chimney Swift
- 2014 – The Brown-headed Nuthatch
- 2013 – The Eastern Meadowlark
- 2011 and 2012 – The Chimney Swift
- 2010 – The Loggerhead Shrike
- 2009 – The Purple Martin
- 2008 – The Prothonatary Warbler