Sora
Porzana carolina
Sora Crake

Description 8-10"
(20-25 cm). A quail-sized rail with short yellow bill, gray breast, and black
face. Upperparts mottled brown; lower abdomen banded with black and white. Young
birds in fall lack black face and have buff breast.
Voice Most
familiar call is a musical series of piping notes rapidly descending the scale;
also a repeated ker-wee, with rising inflection. Near the nest, birds utter an
explosive keek!
Habitat Freshwater
marshes and marshy ponds; rice fields and salt marshes in winter.
Nesting 6-15
pale yellow-buff eggs, spotted with brown, in a cup of cattails and dead leaves,
usually placed in a clump of reeds in an open part of the marsh.
Range Breeds
from British Columbia east through Mackenzie to Maritime Provinces and south to
Pennsylvania, Oklahoma, Arizona, and central California; winters mainly along
coasts north to California and Virginia.
Discussion The
Sora is a common rail throughout its nesting area, its whinnying call familiar
to anyone who has watched birds in a marsh. But it is seldom seen except by
birders who wait patiently beside an opening in the reeds or who wade quietly
through the cattails. These birds are especially numerous in fall and winter in
southern marshes and rice fields, where they are primarily seed eaters. Although
shot in large numbers every year, their high reproductive rate enables them to
maintain a stable population. The greatest threat to the Sora is the destruction
of the freshwater marshes where they breed: they have consequently become scarce
in heavily populated areas.
Seasonal Distribution
| Notes | Jan | Feb | Mar | Apr | May | Jun | Jul | Aug | Sep | Oct | Nov | Dec |
| P | CCC | CCC | CCA | AAA | CC | FFF | CCA | AAA | AAA | CCC | CCC |