List of birds of the Sonoran Desert

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This list of birds of the Sonoran Desert includes all

endemic to the Sonoran Desert, and related areas; (a few species listed are only "native" and have a larger continental range). They are retrieved from the List of birds of Yuma County, Arizona
, though not exclusively.

  • Greater roadrunner
    Greater roadrunner
  • Gila woodpecker Melanerpes uropygialis
    Gila woodpecker Melanerpes uropygialis

Southwest region

The listed birds are based on the southern section of the Lower Colorado River Valley, from Yuma County and La Paz County, to the Bill Williams River, (and by extension to Needles, California/Topock, Arizona). The Colorado River borders the higher elevation Mojave Desert to the northwest (Needles and Las Vegas), the Colorado Desert–(extension of Sonoran Desert) on the southwest and west, and the deserts of the Sonoran Desert to the east, the Yuma Desert, Lechuguilla Desert, and the Tule Desert.

Bolded species are exclusive to the hottest deserts (southwestern Arizona; Baja California; northern Mexico; and the Carrizo Plain).

  • Greater roadrunner
    Greater
    roadrunner
  • Gila woodpecker Melanerpes uropygialis
    Gila woodpecker
    Melanerpes uropygialis
  • Abert's towhee Melozone aberti
    Abert's towhee
    Melozone aberti
  • Phainopepla Phainopepla nitens
    Phainopepla
    Phainopepla nitens
  • Yellow-headed Blackbird Xanthocephalus xanthocephalus
    Yellow-headed
    Blackbird
    Xanthocephalus
    xanthocephalus

Southeast region

The southeast Arizona region is defined by: 1–the mountains of eastern Arizona, extending into western and southwestern New Mexico; 2–the

Madrean sky islands; and 3–the northernmost extension of the western spine mountain range of Mexico, the Sierra Madre Occidental (West). The result is a biome region particular to its: geographic locale, elevation, and proximity to flyways, namely for the mountains (of Mexico, the United States, and to Canada), and for the proximity to the Gulf of California, Gulf of Mexico, and the Pacific Ocean
.

See also

References