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Birdwatching on Cyprus - Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis

The Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow (Passer hispaniolensis) is a passerine bird of the sparrow family Passeridae. It is found in the Mediterranean region and south-west and central Asia. It is very similar to the closely related House Sparrow, and the two species show their close relation in a "biological mix-up" of hybridisation in the Mediterranean region, which complicates the taxonomy of this species.

Passerine bird

A passerine is any bird of the order Passeriformes, which includes more than half of all bird species. Sometimes known as perching birds or — less accurately — as songbirds, passerines are distinguished from other orders of birds by the arrangement of their toes (three pointing forward and one back), which facilitates perching.

With more than 110 families and some 5,100 identified species, Passeriformes is the largest order of birds and among the most diverse orders of terrestrial vertebrates.

The passerines contain several groups of brood parasites such as the viduas, cuckoo-finches, and the cowbirds. Most passerines are omnivorous, while the shrikes are carnivorous.

The terms “passerine” and “Passeriformes” are derived from Passer domesticus, the scientific name of the eponymous species (the House Sparrow) and ultimately from the Latin term passer, which refers to sparrows and similar small birds.

Distribution and habitat
The Spanish sparrow has a highly complex distribution in the Mediterranean region, Macaronesia, and south-west to central Asia. It breeds mostly in a band of latitude about fifteen degrees wide, from the Danube valley and the Aral Sea in the north to Libya and central Iran in the south.

Its range has expanded greatly by natural colonisation over the last two centuries, in the Balkans, where it reached Romania, Serbia, and Moldova from 1950 onwards; and in Macaronesia, where its range expansion has been attributed to introductions and travel by ship, but was more likely natural colonisation by migrating birds. Vagrants occur widely, as far north as Scotland and Norway.

Habitat
In most of its range, the Spanish sparrow occurs alongside the House Sparrow. In such areas, both species breed in farmland and open woodland, with the Spanish sparrow preferring moister habitats. In areas where House Sparrows are absent, the Spanish sparrow may live in urban habitats, as in the Canary Islands, Madeira, and some Mediterranean islands.

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Spanish Sparrow nesting in a wall
Popeye Village on Malta - May 2021

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Spanish Sparrow nesting in a wall
Popeye Village on Malta - May 2021

In a few urban areas, such as those in eastern Sardinia, the primary sparrow species is the Eurasian Tree Sparrow.

Before the Spanish sparrow arrived in the Canary Islands and Madeira, the rock sparrow was the sole native sparrow. In the Canaries, the Spanish sparrow occurs in most habitats, having ousted the rock sparrow from all but the driest localities.

In Madeira the Spanish sparrow is common in cultivated areas, but it has not fully adapted to nesting in buildings or breeding in the drier north of the island.

The Spanish sparrow is not common on most of the Cape Verde islands, due to the presence of the endemic Iago sparrow, and the House Sparrow on São Vicente. On Fogo, where it is the sole species of sparrow, it is common in all habitats, breeding both in the houses of São Filipe and on the cliff walls of the volcano Pico do Fogo.

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis

Range map
Range map from www.oiseaux.net - Ornithological Portal Oiseaux.net
www.oiseaux.net is one of those MUST visit pages if you're in to bird watching. You can find just about everything there

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Distribution of the Spanish and Italian sparrows - Click HERE for full size map
By L. Shyamal - Own work, Public Domain, Link
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Subspecies hispaniolensis


The western subspecies hispaniolensis breeds in parts of Iberia and North Africa, some islands, and the Balkans. In Iberia it is uncommon, occurring in the Tagus valley and sporadically in the northern meseta, the eastern coast, and in the Guadalquivir and Guadiana valleys.

While the House Sparrow and the Spanish sparrow form a "hybrid swarm" in the eastern half of the Maghreb, they coexist with little hybridisation in the western half.

In northern Italy and Corsica the Spanish sparrow is replaced by the Italian sparrow, and the two intergrade in southern Italy, as well as Malta, Crete, and nearby islands such as Rhodes.

The Spanish sparrow is not known to breed in the Balearic Islands, the Aegean Islands, Corfu, or the Peloponnese, but it occurs on Sardinia, Pantelleria, and smaller islands near the coast. In the Balkans, it occurs patchily from Montenegro across into the Danube valley of Romania and northern Serbia.

It is found in mainland Greece and Bulgaria, where it is also uncommon.

The Spanish sparrow is likely to have been established on the western Canary Islands for some time, as it was found on Lanzarote when a naturalist first visited the island in 1828. In the 1830s, it was recorded on Fuerteventura, Gran Canaria, and Tenerife and since the 1940s it has reached all the other islands.

It reached Madeira in May 1935, when numbers of sparrows were found across the island after nine days of strong, continuous easterly winds.

It seems to have reached Cape Verde around the same time it reached the Canaries, and it was first recorded there on Santiago by Charles Darwin in 1832. From then onwards it reached all the other larger islands, in a poorly recorded extension of its range.

Subspecies transcaspicus


The eastern subspecies transcaspicus breeds from Anatolia and Cyprus through the Middle East and Central Asia to far western China. In the Middle East it breeds through Syria and Lebanon to about as far south as Jerusalem.

It breeds in eastern Turkey, but is a very rare breeder in Iraq and Kuwait. It breeds sporadically in Azerbaijan and Dagestan, north to the Terek River valley.

In Iran, it breeds in most of the country except the Persian Gulf region, also breeding in central and northern Afghanistan.

In Central Asia, it breeds from the regions of the Turkmenistan-Iran and Tajikistan-Afghanistan borders north to parts of the Syr Darya basin in Kazakhstan, and westwards to Lake Alakol, the Karatal River, and a corner of China.

Here it has also expanded its range, in the area around Lake Alakol in Kazakhstan, where agriculture was not developed until the 1950s. It winters in the plains of the Indian subcontinent and the Persian Gulf.

Taxonomy and systematics
The Spanish sparrow is a close relative of the House Sparrow in the genus Passer and the sparrow family Passeridae. Its taxonomy is greatly complicated by the "biological mix-up" it forms with the House Sparrow in the Mediterranean.

In most of the Mediterranean, one or both of the two species occurs, with only a limited degree of hybridisation. On the Italian Peninsula and Corsica, the two species are replaced by the Italian sparrow, a puzzling type of sparrow apparently intermediate between the Spanish sparrow and the House Sparrow.

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis


The Italian sparrow has been classified as a hybrid with the House Sparrow, the same species as the Spanish sparrow, the same species as the House Sparrow, and as a separate species.

The Spanish sparrow also hybridises freely with House Sparrow in parts of northern Africa (north-eastern Algeria, Tunisia, and north-western Libya), forming highly variable mixed populations with a full range of characters from pure House Sparrow to pure Spanish sparrow.

On the Mediterranean islands of Malta, Gozo, Crete, Rhodes, and Karpathos, there are more apparently intermediate birds of unknown status.

Phylogenetic studies of nuclear mitochondrial DNA pseudogenes show that the House Sparrow is closely related genetically to the Italian sparrow but not the Spanish sparrow.

The Spanish sparrow was first described by the Dutch zoologist Coenraad Jacob Temminck as Fringilla hispaniolensis, from a specimen collected at Algeciras, in southern Spain. The usual English name refers to the description of the species from Spain.

The name willow sparrow, referring to the moist habitat of this bird, is sometimes used, especially when the Italian sparrow is considered the same species. The genus name Passer is the Latin for sparrow, and hispaniolensis is New Latin for "Spanish".

Two subspecies of Spanish sparrow are usually recognised, the western nominate subspecies hispaniolensis, and the eastern transcaspicus, described by Austrian ornithologist Viktor von Tschusi zu Schmidhoffen in 1902 from Ýolöten, Turkmenistan.

Birds in Anatolia and Cyprus are usually considered to belong to P. h. transcaspicus, but birds as far east as Ceylanpınar have been noted as intermediates, and the difference between the two subspecies may be clinal.

Description
The Spanish sparrow is a rather large sparrow, at 15–16 cm in length, and 22–36 g in weight. It is slightly larger and heavier than House Sparrows, and also has a slightly longer and stouter bill.

The male is similar to the House Sparrow in plumage, but differs in that its underparts are heavily streaked with black, has a chestnut rather than grey crown, and has white rather than grey cheeks.

The female is effectively inseparable from House Sparrow in its plumage, which is grey-brown overall but more boldly marked.

The female has light streaking on its sides, a pale cream supercilium, and broad cream streaks on its back.

The two subspecies differ little in worn breeding plumage, but both sexes are quite distinct in fresh winter plumage, with the eastern subspecies P. h. transcaspicus paler with less chestnut.

Voice
The Spanish sparrow's vocalisations are similar to those of the House Sparrow. The male gives a call somewhat different from that of the House Sparrow when displaying at its nest. This call is a pair of strident, disyllabic chirps, similar to those of the House Sparrow, but louder and high-pitched, transcribed as chweeng-chweeng, cheela-cheeli.

A similar call, softer and more like the House Sparrow's tschilp, is used by birds arriving or departing at roosting sites. The Spanish sparrow's other calls are almost the same as those of the House Sparrow.

A soft quer quer quer is given at the nest by mated pairs, a quer-it flight call is given by flocking birds, and a chur-chur-it call is given as a threat.

Listen to the Spanish Sparrow

www.xeno-canto.org

Remarks from the Recordist

Editing: High-pass filter, cutoff frequency 1kHz, some amplification.

Equipment: Olympus WS-822 digital recorder with Audio-technica ATR 6550 shotgun.



Status
The European population of the Spanish sparrow comprises between 2,800,000 and 6,200,000 breeding pairs or 8,400,000–18,600,000 individuals. Partly from the European population, the global population is estimated to be between 17 and 74 million individuals.

There have been population decreases in some parts of Europe, but in other areas the population has increased and the species is not seriously threatened, so it is assessed as least concern on the IUCN Red List.

Conservation status
Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)
IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2013.2.
International Union for Conservation of Nature. Retrieved 26 November 2013.



From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

www.birdforum.net


Sighted: (Date of first photo that I could use) 15 February 2018
Location: Mandria Beach, Cyprus


Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow
15 February 2018 - Mandria Beach, Cyprus

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow
15 February 2018 - Mandria Beach, Cyprus

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow
15 February 2018 - Mandria Beach, Cyprus

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow
7 March 2021 - eBird hotspot: Anarita (Αναρίτα) Park

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow
22 March 2021 - 1 Triq Monsinjur Pawlu Mallia, Il-Gudja, Malta

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow
23 March 2021 - Ghadira NR, Malta

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow
25 March 2021 - Lower Barrakka Gardens, Malta

Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow, Passer hispaniolensis
Spanish Sparrow or Willow Sparrow
27 March 2021 - San Anton Gardens, Malta




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