The Savannah sparrow was
formally described in 1789 by the German naturalist
Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of
Carl Linnaeus's
Systema Naturae. He placed it with the buntings in the
genus Emberiza and coined the
binomial name Emberiza sandwichensis. Gmelin based his text on the
Sandwich bunting that had been described by
John Latham in 1783 and the "Unalasha bunting" that had been described by
Thomas Pennant in 1785. Latham and Pennant had access to a specimen owned by the naturalist
Joseph Banks that had been collected in May 1778 from Sandwich Sound (now
Prince William Sound) in southern Alaska during
James Cook's
third voyage to the Pacific Ocean. The specimen has not survived, but a coloured drawing of the bird made during the voyage by the artist and naturalist
William Ellis is now held by the
Natural History Museum in London. The Savannah sparrow is now the only species placed in the genus
Passerculus that was introduced in 1838 by the French naturalist
Charles Bonaparte. The English name "Savannah sparrow" was introduced in 1811 by the Scottish-American ornithologist
Alexander Wilson in the third volume of his
American Ornithology; or, the Natural History of the Birds of the United States. Wilson had first seen the species on the coast near
Savannah, Georgia. A 2005 study that compared
mitochondrial DNA sequence found that the Ipswich sparrow, formerly usually considered a valid species (as
Passerculus princeps), was a well-marked
subspecies, whereas the southwestern large-billed sparrow was more distinct (
Passerculus rostratus).
Savannah sparrows proper , Canada All are migratory; wintering ranges overlap widely. •
P. s. labradorius Howe, 1901 – breeds in
Newfoundland,
Labrador, and N
Quebec. Includes
P. s. oblitus. •
P. s. savanna (
Wilson, A, 1811) – (
eastern Savannah sparrow), breeds in the northeast US and adjacent Canada (includes
P. s. mediogriseus) •
P. s. sandwichensis (
Gmelin, JF, 1789) – (
Aleutian Savannah sparrow), breeds on the
Aleutian Islands and west
Alaskan Peninsula •
P. s. anthinus Bonaparte, 1853 – breeds in the remainder of Alaska, south and east to central
British Columbia and north of the
Great Plains to Manitoba. Includes
P. s. crassus. •
P. s. brooksi Bishop, 1915 – (
dwarf Savannah sparrow), breeds in southernmost British Columbia to northernmost
California •
P. s. alaudinus Bonaparte, 1853 – breeds in coastal northern and central California •
P. s. nevadensis Grinnell, 1910 – breeds in the northern Great Plains and the
Great Basin •
P. s. brunnescens (
Butler, AW, 1888) – breeds from central Mexico south to Guatemala (includes
P. s. rufofuscus) •
P. s. wetmorei Van Rossem, 1938 – a doubtful subspecies that may breed in the mountains of Guatemala. It is known from only five specimens, collected June 11–17, 1897, in
Huehuetenango Department.
Ipswich sparrow Some post-breeding dispersal. Formerly considered as a distinct species. There are two dark, large and strong-billed subspecies: •
P. s. rostratus (
Cassin, 1852) – breeds on the Gulf Coast of northeast
Baja California and northwest
Sonora (some post-breeding dispersal). •
P. s. atratus Van Rossem, 1930 – resident on the coast of central
Sonora to central
Sinaloa (resident) '''Belding's (Savannah/large-billed) sparrows''' are all-year residents of
salt marshes of the
Californian Pacific coast. They are dark,
rufous, and have rather long but not very hefty bills. This group has been considered as a separate species. with that of Belding's sparrows. However, their bill size is due to
convergent evolution and their habitat choice simply to the lack of alternatives on their barren island home; altogether, it appears to be a fairly recent offshoot from the Belding's sparrows group. It appears as distinct
evolutionarily from these as does the Ipswich sparrow from the Savannah sparrow proper group, only that there seems to have been more
gene flow and/or a larger
founder population in the case of the latter. ==Description==