Dark-eyed Junco
Dark-eyed Junco
Dark-eyed Junco

Dark-eyed Junco


The Dark-eyed Junco is a familiar and endearing songbird, best known for its crisp coloration and ground-feeding habits. While widespread across North America, it is a winter resident of the Coachella Valley and a summer breeder in the surrounding mountains, especially the San Jacinto Range.

Appearance

In Southern California, the β€œOregon” subspecies is most common:

  • Head: Dark slate-gray to black, creating a distinctive hooded appearance.

  • Back and flanks: Warm brown tones along the back and sides.

  • Belly: Clean white, contrasting with darker upperparts.

  • Tail: Flashes of white in the outer feathers, visible in flight.

  • Bill: Pale pink and conical.

Behavior and Adaptations

Dark-eyed Juncos are primarily ground foragers, scratching for seeds, insects, and other plant material. Their diet shifts with the seasons, leaning heavily on insects during the breeding months and seeds in winter. Their call is a high, musical β€œchip,” and males sing a soft, trilling song from low perches.

Seasonal Movements: Desert to Mountains

A striking feature of the junco’s life in this region is its altitudinal migration. In winter, they descend to the Coachella Valley floor, oases, desert canyons, and gardens, often in flocks. As spring warms the highlands, they migrate upslope to summer breeding grounds in places like Idyllwild and the San Jacinto Mountains, where they nest in pine and oak forests at elevations above 5,000 feet. This short-distance, vertical migration allows them to track seasonal food and nesting conditions without long-range travel.

Habitat and Ecological Role

By wintering in lowland deserts and breeding in montane forests, juncos play roles in insect control and seed dispersal across a wide range of elevations. Their adaptability makes them one of the region’s most successful seasonal migrants.

Fun Fact

The Dark-eyed Junco is often called a β€œsnowbird” in colder regions, but in the Coachella Valley, it becomes a β€œcool-season bird,” offering a glimpse of alpine life each winter before retreating upslope for summer nesting.

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