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A Spotted Towhee at South Llano River State Park
sparrow
Towhee on a fence post in the sun
Spotted Towhee eating in the light, Delta, BC, Canada
Spotted Towhee (Pipilo maculatus) Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada
Perched on a neighborhood fence, a spotted towhee hunts in insects under the trees in Denver, Colorado.
The spotted towhee is a large New World sparrow. The taxonomy of the towhees has been debated in recent decades, and until 1995 this bird and the eastern towhee were considered a single species, the rufous-sided towhee. Another outdated name for the spotted towhee is the Oregon towhee. Wikipedia
Spotted Towhee hiding in the yellow flowers of the brooms.
Portrait of a California Towhee standing on a rock
Portrait of Spotted Tower
Puerto Ayora, Galapagos
Song Sparrow
The frog is a passerine bird in the family Passerellidae. Background photo
Sparrows (Passer domesticus) looking for worms on a garden lawn. Focus on left bird.
Close-up of Towhee bird in Stanley Park
Tree Sparrow atop a Blackthorn Bush in Devon, February, 2025
Towhee bird eating seed in Colorful Colorado
Rufous-Collared Sparrow Bird
Eastern towhee at Maplewood Mudflats Wild Bird Trust during a spring season in North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
A spotted towhee (Pipilo maculatus) perched on a tree branch in the Willamette Valley of Oregon. Has a soft, defocused, bright background with twigs. Taken in November. Edited.
(Pipilo maculatus) The Spotted Towhee is found east of the Mississippi River in the continental United States.   It has a black head with red eyes, white markings on wings and longish tail.  Towhees are generally ground feeders eating invertebrates and seed.
Newmarket, On
Spotted Towhee (pipilo maculatus) with a seed in it's beak
sparrow eating insect
Spotted Towhee bird with a sunflower seed in its mouth at the Big Morongo Canyon Preserve in California
Male Spotted Towhee perched in a bush, Delta, British Columbia, Canada
Spotted towhee bird at Vancouver BC Canada
Small bird, its average size is 21.5 to 28.5 cm (males) and 22 to 25 cm (females). It weighs between 110 and 285 g (males) and between 150 and 265 g (females). It has a round head, without plumes and the eyes are arranged side by side, in the same plane. The eyebrows are white and the eyes are yellow. The coloration is earthy, mimetic, and may present plumage in rusty tones caused by purple earth soils (adventitious coloration). Unlike most owls, the male is slightly larger than the female and females are normally darker than males, particularly on the face. It has a smooth and silent flight. She has to turn her neck, because her big eyes are arranged side by side in the same plane. This frontal arrangement gives the owl binocular vision (it sees an object with both eyes at the same time). This means that the owl can see objects in three dimensions, that is, height, width and depth. The eyes of the burrowing owl are very large, in some subspecies of owls they are even larger than the brain itself, in order to improve its efficiency in low light conditions, better capturing and processing the available light.
Montesinos bunting or Emberiza cia, passerine scribe family.
An alert Spotted Towhee, Pipilo maculatus, fka Rufous-sided Towhee, perched in a bush in Terra Nova Natural Area, Richmond, British Columbia, Canada
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