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John M. Lynch is an Honors Faculty Fellow at Barrett the Honors College at Arizona State University. He's also affiliated with ASU's Center for Biology & Society. When he's not an historian of anti-evolutionism, he's an evolutionary morphologist. Much to his surprise, in 2007 he was named the Arizona Professor of the Year. No doubt his students were surprised as well.

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« Today in Science (1111) | Main | Why Women Shouldn't Be Astronauts »

White-Crowned Sparrow

Posted on: November 11, 2007 1:40 PM, by John Lynch

WhiteCrownedSparrow0LR

White-Crowned Sparrow, Zonotrichia leucophrys

We recently planted winter grass and have managed to attract large numbers of white-crowned sparrows, a species that I hadn’t seen before here in Tempe.

[image source]

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The White Crown normally migrates along the Pacific Coast. A project from Princeton University was done to watch adult and immature White Crowns re-configure their migration flight patterns. They captured a significant number of White Crowns (I think it was 30) in the state of Washington. They brought them to NJ and released them. Allo of those who had made the migration before, were addled for about 24 hours and then headed southwest. They got back on their normal route at someplace like San Diego. Maybe one went through your yard on the way there.

What do I know? Its just a thought and the experiment was real.

Posted by: mike stahl | November 19, 2007 5:39 PM

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