order Passeriformes: perching birds
family Passerellidae: sparrows & towhees

Spotted Towhee #13Sacramento County California  08 January 2021

Spotted Towhee #14Sacramento County California  12 January 2021

Spotted Towhee #15Sacramento County California  12 January 2021

Spotted Towhee #16Sacramento County California  12 January 2021

Spotted Towhee #17Sacramento County California  30 January 2021

Spotted Towhee #18Sacramento County California  30 January 2021

Spotted Towhee #21Sacramento County California  09 March 2021

Spotted Towhee #23Sacramento County California  16 September 2021

Spotted Towhee #27Sacramento County California  15 December 2021

Spotted Towhee #28Sacramento County California  15 December 2021

Spotted Towhee #29Sacramento County California  15 December 2021

Spotted Towhee #30Sacramento County California  15 December 2021

Spotted Towhee #31Sacramento County California  15 December 2021

Spotted Towhee #32Sacramento County California  15 December 2021

Spotted Towhee #34Sacramento County California  22 February 2022

Spotted Towhee #35Sacramento County California  22 February 2022

Spotted Towhee #36Sacramento County California  22 February 2022

Spotted Towhee #37Sacramento County California  22 February 2022

Spotted Towhee #38Sacramento County California  22 February 2022

Spotted Towhee #39Sacramento County California  08 December 2022

Spotted Towhee #40Sacramento County California  08 December 2022

Spotted Towhee #41Sacramento County California  08 December 2022

Spotted Towhee #42Sacramento County California  08 December 2022

Spotted Towhee #43Sacramento County California  08 December 2022

Spotted Towhee #44Sacramento County California  20 December 2022

Spotted Towhee #45Sacramento County California  20 December 2022

Field identification tips: The Spotted Towhee's (Pipilo maculatus) dark hood contrasting with white belly, red eyes, rusty-colored sides and dark back & wings with white spots make this bird unmistakable. Adult males have a black hood and generally brighter colors while females' and immature birds' colors are more muted. The similar Eastern Towhee (Pipilo erythrophthalmus), at one time thought to be conspecific with P. maculatus, lacks the white spots on the back & wings, and lives farther east.

Typical range:  P. maculatus is typically found in the western portions of the North American continent, migratory in the Rocky Mountains and western Great Plains, and permanent residents in the more western states.

Habitat:  P. maculatus is at home is dense brush and forest understory (including messy suburban yards) where a two-step fore-and-aft scratching in leaf litter is used to find its food. Winter food is primarily seeds and berries while breeding season's meal plan includes numerous types of invertebrates.
all photographs Copyright © Douglas Herr
last updated 04 August 2024
Back to Top