Scientific Name
Artemisiospiza nevadensis
Scientific Name w/ Auth.
Artemisiospiza nevadensis (Ridgway, 1874)
Park
Grand Canyon National Park (GRCA)
Sensitive
No
Park Accepted
Accepted
Record Status
Approved
Park Preferred Common Names
Sage Sparrow
Park Synonyms
Taxonomic Hierarchy
Kingdom | Animalia |
Subkingdom | Bilateria |
Infrakingdom | Deuterostomia |
Phylum | Chordata |
Subphylum | Vertebrata |
Infraphylum | Gnathostomata |
Superclass | Tetrapoda |
Class | Aves |
Order | Passeriformes |
Family | Passerellidae |
Genus | Artemisiospiza |
Species | Artemisiospiza nevadensis |
Occurrence
Present
Occurrence Notes
An uncommon and local summer resident of sagebrush areas throughout the region. The Arizona Breeding Bird Atlas located Sage Sparrows in a number of new locations, including House Rock Valley, along the north edge of the Kaibab Plateau, from Kanab Creek west to the Hurricane Cliffs, and south of the canyon’s South Rim (Corman 2005f). It is a rare migrant elsewhere in the region in May and again from late September to late November. Sage Sparrow is a casual winter visitor, with five winter records from the rims and river. Conditions may vary among subspecies. Data source: Gatlin, BP. 2011. Annotated Checklist of the Birds of the Grand Canyon Region. 3rd edition.
Nativeness
Native
Abundance
Uncommon
Seasonality Tags
- Breeder
- Winter
Geographic Regions Tags
- Park Wide
Threatened Endangered Status
State Species of Concern statuses
Ozone Sensitive Status
NatureServe GRank
NatureServe SRank
Observations
0
References
0
Vouchers
0
External Links
0
Evidence counts shown include evidence for related synonyms.
Created By
MTerwilliger@nps.gov
Created Date
8/15/2016 9:57:31 AM
Last Modified By
mterwilliger@nps.gov
Last Modified Date
8/18/2016 1:43:38 PM
Notes
For (Artemisiospiza belli) * Sage Sparrow is an uncommon and local summer resident of sagebrush areas throughout the region. The Arizona Breeding Bird Atlas located Sage Sparrows in a number of new locations, including House Rock Valley, along the north edge of the Kaibab Plateau, from Kanab Creek west to the Hurricane Cliffs, and south of the canyon’s South Rim (Corman 2005f). It is a rare migrant elsewhere in the region in May and again from late September to late November. Sage Sparrow is a casual winter visitor, with five winter records from the rims and river. Conditions may vary among subspecies. Data source: Gatlin, BP. 2011. Annotated Checklist of the Birds of the Grand Canyon Region. 3rd edition.
Other Parks
Arches National Park (ARCH)
Bryce Canyon National Park (BRCA)
Canyonlands National Park (CANY)
Capitol Reef National Park (CARE)
Colorado National Monument (COLM)
Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve (CRMO)
Curecanti National Recreation Area (CURE)
Dinosaur National Monument (DINO)
Fossil Butte National Monument (FOBU)
Golden Spike National Historical Park (GOSP)
Great Basin National Park (GRBA)
Hovenweep National Monument (HOVE)
Natural Bridges National Monument (NABR)
Pipe Spring National Monument (PISP)
Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument (TUSK)
Bryce Canyon National Park (BRCA)
Canyonlands National Park (CANY)
Capitol Reef National Park (CARE)
Colorado National Monument (COLM)
Craters of the Moon National Monument and Preserve (CRMO)
Curecanti National Recreation Area (CURE)
Dinosaur National Monument (DINO)
Fossil Butte National Monument (FOBU)
Golden Spike National Historical Park (GOSP)
Great Basin National Park (GRBA)
Hovenweep National Monument (HOVE)
Natural Bridges National Monument (NABR)
Pipe Spring National Monument (PISP)
Tule Springs Fossil Beds National Monument (TUSK)