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House sparrow Tiu Adult male. Wanganui, June It lives mostly in close association with man. This ubiquity has led to many studies of it as a pest and of its physiology, energetics, behaviour, genetics and evolution. There is even a scientific journal devoted to work on the house sparrow and other Passer species.
House sparrows were introduced to New Zealand first in the mid s. They soon became abundant and were said to be combating plagues of agricultural pests. By the s, however, they were regarded as pests. Sparrows have made their own way to offshore islands, breeding on those with human habitation.
They have evolved differences in morphology in response to local environments. The best source of information on sparrow biology is the monograph by Summers-Smith, although adjustment for the six-month difference in seasons is necessary. Females and young lack the bib and are greyer, with lighter brown dorsal plumage than the male. Their underparts are plain grey, but their backs and wings are variegated several shades of brown and white. The robust conical bill is black in breeding males, otherwise pale pinkish-brown.
The eyes are dark brown and legs dull pink. The alarm call is harsher. Similar species: females and juveniles can be confused with dunnock, greenfinch or chaffinch.
Dunnocks are smaller, with darker, more sombre plumage, and a slender dark bill. They usually stay close to cover, and are never in large flocks. Chaffinches differ in their distinctive double wing-bar and white outer tail. The young of greenfinches are greenish above their shorter tail. In comparison with finches, sparrow flight generally is more direct, almost laboured, and usually low.