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・ Chestnut-breasted mountain finch
・ Chestnut-breasted nigrita
・ Chestnut-breasted partridge
・ Chestnut-breasted quail-thrush
・ Chestnut-breasted whiteface
・ Chestnut-breasted wren
・ Chestnut-capped babbler
・ Chestnut-capped blackbird
・ Chestnut-capped brush finch
・ Chestnut-capped flycatcher
・ Chestnut-capped laughingthrush
・ Chestnut-capped piha
・ Chestnut-capped puffbird
・ Chestnut-capped thrush
・ Chestnut-cheeked starling
Chestnut-collared longspur
・ Chestnut-collared swallow
・ Chestnut-collared swift
・ Chestnut-coloured woodpecker
・ Chestnut-crested antbird
・ Chestnut-crested cotinga
・ Chestnut-crested yuhina
・ Chestnut-crowned antpitta
・ Chestnut-crowned babbler
・ Chestnut-crowned becard
・ Chestnut-crowned bush warbler
・ Chestnut-crowned foliage-gleaner
・ Chestnut-crowned gnateater
・ Chestnut-crowned laughingthrush
・ Chestnut-crowned sparrow-weaver


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Chestnut-collared longspur : ウィキペディア英語版
Chestnut-collared longspur

The chestnut-collared longspur (''Calcarius ornatus'') is a small ground-feeding bird from the family Calcariidae which also contains the longspurs.
These birds have a short conical bill, a streaked back and a white tail with a dark tip. In breeding plumage, the male has black underparts, a chestnut nape, a yellow throat and a black crown. Other birds have light brown underparts, a dark crown, brown wings and may have some chestnut on the nape.
This bird breeds in short and mixed grass prairies in central Canada and the north central United States. The female lays 4 or 5 eggs in a grass cup nest in a shallow scrape on the ground. The male sings and flies up to defend his territory. Both parents feed the young birds.
In winter, they migrate in flocks to prairies and open fields in the southern United States and Mexico.
These birds forage on the ground, gathering in flocks in winter. They mainly eat seeds, also eating insects in summer. Young birds are mainly fed insects.
The call is a two-syllabled ''chee dee''.
==Conservation==
Like other prairie birds, they have disappeared from some areas due to habitat loss but are still fairly common.
Controlled burns may benefit this species as they feed on low-growing plants that are more easily spotted after a fire.〔''Prairies to Pines: News from Minnesota, North Dakota, and South Dakota''. (Fall 2010 Update). The Nature Conservancy.〕
==References==
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