White-crowned Sparrow

Introduction
A common breeding bird across much of Canada and the north-western United States, White-crowned Sparrows normally winter in the United States and Mexico. A few individuals have occurred in Britain & Ireland, some of which have hitched a lift on ships carrying grain.
Because male White-crowned Sparrows learn the songs they grew up with and do not travel far from where they were raised, song dialects form – males on the edge of two dialects may be 'bilingual'.

Key Stats
Status and Trends
Conservation Status
Population Size
Population Change
Population trends of this scarce species are not routinely monitored.
Distribution
This species is a rare vagrant and was recorded during Bird Atlas 2007–11 as shown on the map.
Occupied 10-km squares in UK
or view it on Bird Atlas Mapstore.
or view it on Bird Atlas Mapstore.
Distribution Change
This vagrant is too rarely reported to map distribution change.
Seasonality
This species has been too rarely reported to BirdTrack during 2011–22 to properly assess seasonality.
Movement
Britain & Ireland movement
Biology
Survival and Longevity
Survival is shown as the proportion of birds surviving from one year to the next and is derived from bird ringing data. It can also be used to estimate how long birds typically live.
Classification, names and codes
Classification and Codes
- Order: Passeriformes
- Family: Passerellidae
- Scientific name: Zonotrichia leucophrys
- Authority: JR Forster, 1772
- BTO 5-letter code: WHCSP
- Euring code number: 18390
Alternate species names
- Catalan: sit de coroneta blanca
- Czech: strnadec belokorunkatý
- Danish: Hvidkronet Spurv
- Dutch: Witkruingors
- Estonian: valgekiird-sidrik
- Finnish: juovapääsirkku
- French: Bruant à couronne blanche
- German: Dachsammer
- Hungarian: koronás verébsármány
- Icelandic: Kúftittlingur
- Italian: Passero coronabianca
- Latvian: baltgalvas zvirbulis
- Lithuanian: baltabruve zonotrichija
- Norwegian: Hvitkronespurv
- Polish: pasówka bialobrewa
- Portuguese: tico-tico-coroado
- Slovak: strnádlik jazvecí
- Slovenian: vrabonad
- Spanish: Chingolo coroniblanco
- Swedish: vitkronad sparv