Just like for a robin, a little digging proved fruitful....or should I say wormful? "The Great Backyard Bird Count" (GBBC) revealed that during the winter, the territoriality of the American robin decreases dramatically. Two graphs on the website, which I have included below, help us to understand what is going on. The first graph, titled "Percent Submissions With Positive Sightings," charts the number of people who see robins. As you can see, the peak months for robin sightings are between the months of April and July, with a peak in July. March, as well as August through October, are also pretty good times to see robins, but during the winter months between November and February, robins are not seen as often.
The second graph, titled "Average Number of Birds for Positive Sightings" charts how many robins people typically see together: i.e., if they report a robin sighting, they also report how many robins there were together. As you can see, April through September are definitely the worst months to see multiple robins together, with October through February being the best time, and a large peak in November.
Graphs are tough: what does this all mean in English? Essentially, during the breeding season (spring and summer), robins maintain strict territories, which causes them to spread out, with a more even distribution. This means that you would be more likely to see a robin on a walk through the park, but not several robins in the same place. During the winter, presumably because their breeding territories are simply too small for them to get enough food, and since it is no longer the breeding season, they abandon their territories, allowing different robins to go wherever they wish. For whatever reason, probably something to do with mutual protection, they also form flocks. The forming of flocks also causes the number of individuals per sighting to increase.
Another study conducted by the GBBC (read the full write-up HERE) pertained to snow depth and frequency of robin sightings. As you can see in the graph below, the likelihood of spotting an American robin with even just a little bit of snow drops quite dramatically. Similar results were reported for the red-winged blackbird, while birds such as the white-throated sparrow and northern flicker responded to increased snow depth as well, but not quite as dramatically.
For the robin, a bird that typically feeds on the ground, even just a little bit of snow cover might prove to be an issue. However, other ground-feeding birds, such as the dark-eyed junco, didn't seem to mind the snow anywhere near as much as the robin. GBBC suggested that other factors must affect the distribution of these birds, such as "weather, diet, and the species' normal range and altitudinal limits."
A male house sparrow. |
A female house finch, silhouetted against the backdrop of the evening sky. |
Stokes, Donald, and Lillian Stokes. The Stokes Field Guide to the Birds of North America. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2010. (accessed January 23, 2014).
"Winter Robins." The Great Backyard Bird Count. http://www.birdsource.org/gbbcX/science-stories/past-stories/is-that-winter-flock-of-robins-in-your-yard-unusual/ (accessed January 23, 2014).