Curious Perching Behavior of English Sparrow
Online Full Text
The concrete sections of the Oakland-Alameda Estuary tubes are being constructed in the dry dock at Hunter's Point in San Francisco. These are circular in cross section and are covered with a layer of waterproofing, and then sheathed with planks.
While walking along beside one of these sections I saw a male English Sparrow (Passer domesticus) alight on the side of the tube, clinging there with his claws and bracing himself with his tail in a manner very similar to a Woodpecker. His tail was spread out like a fan beneath him, and he was pecking into a crack between two boards. I could not find out what he was after, though I am sure there was no food there, as the boards had only been in place a few days and were in a position on the horizontal diameter of the tube, where it would be almost impossible for food to lodge.
Berkeley, California, October 17, 1926
Creative Commons License
Recommended Citation
Clabaugh, Ernest D.
(1927)
"Curious Perching Behavior of English Sparrow,"
Condor: Vol. 29
:
Iss.
1
, Article 30.
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/condor/vol29/iss1/30