BirdWatching

FOREIGN EXCHANGE

Eminently vilifiable and hard to avoid, House Sparrows and European Starlings have all but conquered North America. Yet they are far from the only non-native songbirds to have reached our shores.

Here, learn about the other introduced passerines that likewise roam the contiguous United States and Canada, including some not considered countable by the American Birding Association. Concentrated largely but not exclusively in southern Florida and southern California, these relatively little-known species range from a long-tailed brood parasite to a red-faced finch.

(For more info on the many non-native U.S. birds outside the songbird order, see the accompanying sidebar on page 24.)

1 Eurasian Skylark

Native Range: Europe, Asia, and northern Africa

North American Range: Vancouver Island, British Columbia

ABA Countable: Yes

Eurasian Skylarks were repeatedly introduced to North America over a century ago, apparently to remind British settlers of home. Yet these open-country birds with renowned songs only persisted in one location: southern Vancouver Island in British Columbia. At their peak, over

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