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Finch

The true finches are small to medium-sized passerine birds in the family Fringillidae. Finches generally have stout conical bills adapted for eating seeds and nuts and often have colourful plumage. They occupy a great range of habitats where they are usually resident and do not migrate. They have a worldwide native distribution except for Australia and the polar regions. The family Fringillidae contains more than two hundred species divided into fifty genera. It includes the canaries, siskins, redpolls, serins, grosbeaks and euphonias, as well as the morphologically divergent Hawaiian honeycreepers.

Finch
Eurasian bullfinch (female above, male below)
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Superfamily: Passeroidea
Family: Fringillidae
Leach, 1819
Type genus
Fringilla
Linnaeus, 1758
Subfamilies

Fringillinae
Carduelinae
Euphoniinae

Many birds in other families are also commonly called "finches". These groups include the estrildid finches (Estrildidae) of the Old World tropics and Australia; some members of the Old World bunting family (Emberizidae) and the New World sparrow family (Passerellidae); and the Darwin's finches of the Galapagos islands, now considered members of the tanager family (Thraupidae).[1]

Finches and canaries were used in the UK, US and Canada in the coal mining industry to detect carbon monoxide from the eighteenth to twentieth century. This practice ceased in the UK in 1986.[2]

Systematics and taxonomy edit

The name Fringillidae for the finch family was introduced in 1819 by the English zoologist William Elford Leach in a guide to the contents of the British Museum.[3][4] The taxonomy of the family, in particular the cardueline finches, has a long and complicated history. The study of the relationship between the taxa has been confounded by the recurrence of similar morphologies due to the convergence of species occupying similar niches.[5] In 1968 the American ornithologist Raymond Andrew Paynter, Jr. wrote:

Limits of the genera and relationships among the species are less understood – and subject to more controversy – in the carduelines than in any other species of passerines, with the possible exception of the estrildines [waxbills].[6]

Beginning around 1990 a series of phylogenetic studies based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences resulted in substantial revisions in the taxonomy. Several groups of birds that had previously been assigned to other families were found to be related to the finches. The Neotropical Euphonia and the Chlorophonia were formerly placed in the tanager family Thraupidae due to their similar appearance but analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequences revealed that both genera were more closely related to the finches. They are now placed in a separate subfamily Euphoniinae within the Fringillidae.[7][8] The Hawaiian honeycreepers were at one time placed in their own family, Drepanididae but were found to be closely related to the Carpodacus rosefinches and are now placed within the Carduelinae subfamily.[5] The three largest genera, Carpodacus, Carduelis and Serinus were found to be polyphyletic.[5][9][10] Each was split into monophyletic genera. The American rosefinches were moved from Carpodacus to Haemorhous. Carduelis was split by moving the greenfinches to Chloris and a large clade into Spinus leaving just three species in the original genus. Thirty seven species were moved from Serinus to Crithagra leaving eight species in the original genus.[8] Today the family Fringillidae is divided into three subfamilies, the Fringillinae containing a single genus with the chaffinches, the Carduelinae containing 183 species divided into 49 genera, and the Euphoniinae containing the Euphonia and the Chlorophonia.[5]

 
Euphonias, like this thick-billed euphonia, were once treated as tanagers instead of finches.

Although Przewalski's "rosefinch" (Urocynchramus pylzowi) has ten primary flight feathers rather than the nine primaries of other finches, it was sometimes classified in the Carduelinae. It is now assigned to a distinct family, Urocynchramidae, monotypic as to genus and species, and with no particularly close relatives among the Passeroidea.[8][11]

Finch phylogeny
Fringillinae

Fringilla chaffinches

Euphoniinae

Chlorophonia, chlorophonias and some euphonias

Euphonia true euphonias

Carduelinae

Mycerobas Asian grosbeaks

Hesperiphona American grosbeaks

Coccothraustes hawfinch

Eophona Oriental grosbeaks

Carpodacus Eurasian rosefinches

Hawaiian

Melamprosops the extinct poʻouli

?

Oreomystis ʻakikiki

Paroreomyza ʻalauahios and the extinct kākāwahie

?

Dysmorodrepanis the extinct Lanai hookbill

Psittirostra the possibly extinct ʻōʻū

?

Chloridops the extinct Hawaiian grosbeaks

Loxioides palila

?

Rhodacanthis the extinct koa-finches

Telespiza Laysan & Nihoa finches

Ciridops the extinct ʻula-ʻai-hāwane

Drepanis ʻiʻiwi and the extinct mamos

Himatione ʻapapane and the extinct Laysan honeycreeper

Palmeria ʻākohekohe

Pseudonestor Maui parrotbill or kiwikiu

?

Akialoa the extinct ʻakialoas

Hemignathus ʻakiapōlāʻau and the possibly extinct nukupuʻus

Magumma ʻanianiau

?

Viridonia the extinct greater ʻamakihi (could fall anywhere within this clade)

Chlorodrepanis lesser ʻamakihis

Loxops 'akepas, ʻakekeʻe, and ʻalawī

honeycreepers

Pinicola pine grosbeak

Pyrrhula bullfinches

Bucanetes trumpeter and Mongolian finch

Rhodopechys crimson-winged finches

Leucosticte mountain finches

Procarduelis dark-breasted rosefinch

Agraphospiza Blanford's rosefinch

Callacanthis spectacled finch

Pyrrhoplectes golden-naped finch

Haemorhous North American rosefinches

Chloris greenfinches

Rhodospiza desert finch

Rhynchostruthus golden-winged grosbeaks

Crithagra African canaries, serins and siskins

Linurgus oriole finch

Linaria twite and linnets

Acanthis redpolls

Loxia crossbills

Cladogram based on the analysis by Zuccon and colleagues published in 2012,[5] Hawaiian honeycreeper phylogeny based on Lerner and colleagues, 2011[12] and Pratt (2014).[13] Genera or clades with question marks (?) are of controversial or uncertain taxonomic placement. The rosefinches genus Carpodacus is expanded to include the common rosefinch as suggested by Tietze and colleagues[14] and adopted by the International Ornithological Committee.[8]

Fossil record edit

Fossil remains of true finches are rare, and those that are known can mostly be assigned to extant genera at least. Like the other Passeroidea families, the true finches seem to be of roughly Middle Miocene origin, around 20 to 10 million years ago (Ma). An unidentifable finch fossil from the Messinian age, around 12 to 7.3 million years ago (Ma) during the Late Miocene subepoch, has been found at Polgárdi in Hungary.[15][16][17]

Description edit

The smallest "classical" true finches are the Andean siskin (Spinus spinescens) at as little as 9.5 cm (3.8 in) and the lesser goldfinch (Spinus psaltria) at as little as 8 g (0.28 oz). The largest species is probably the collared grosbeak (Mycerobas affinis) at up to 24 cm (9.4 in) and 83 g (2.9 oz), although larger lengths, to 25.5 cm (10.0 in) in the pine grosbeak (Pinicola enucleator), and weights, to 86.1 g (3.04 oz) in the evening grosbeak (Hesperiphona vespertina), have been recorded in species which are slightly smaller on average.[18][19] They typically have strong, stubby beaks, which in some species can be quite large; however, Hawaiian honeycreepers are famous for the wide range of bill shapes and sizes brought about by adaptive radiation. All true finches have 9 primary remiges and 12 rectrices. The basic plumage colour is brownish, sometimes greenish; many have considerable amounts of black, while white plumage is generally absent except as wing-bars or other signalling marks. Bright yellow and red carotenoid pigments are commonplace in this family, and thus blue structural colours are rather rare, as the yellow pigments turn the blue color into green. Many, but by no means all true finches have strong sexual dichromatism, the females typically lacking the bright carotenoid markings of males.[1]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
American goldfinch (Spinus tristis) male (left) and female (right) in Johnston County, North Carolina, USA

The finches have a near-global distribution, being found across the Americas, Eurasia and Africa, as well as some island groups such as the Hawaiian islands. They are absent from Australasia, Antarctica, the Southern Pacific and the islands of the Indian Ocean, although some European species have been widely introduced in Australia and New Zealand.

Finches are typically inhabitants of well-wooded areas, but some can be found on mountains or even in deserts.

Behaviour edit

The finches are primarily granivorous, but euphoniines include considerable amounts of arthropods and berries in their diet, and Hawaiian honeycreepers evolved to utilize a wide range of food sources, including nectar. The diet of Fringillidae nestlings includes a varying amount of small arthropods. True finches have a bouncing flight like most small passerines, alternating bouts of flapping with gliding on closed wings. Most sing well and several are commonly seen cagebirds; foremost among these is the domesticated canary (Serinus canaria domestica). The nests are basket-shaped and usually built in trees, more rarely in bushes, between rocks or on similar substrate.[1]

List of genera edit

The family Fringillidae contains 235 species divided into 50 genera and three subfamilies. The subfamily Carduelinae includes 18 extinct Hawaiian honeycreepers and the extinct Bonin grosbeak.[8] See List of Fringillidae species for further details.

Subfamily Fringillinae

Subfamily Carduelinae

Subfamily Euphoniinae

  • Euphonia – 27 species all with euphonia in their English name
  • Chlorophonia – 5 species all with chlorophonia in their English name

Gallery edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Newton (1973), Clement et al. (1993)
  2. ^ Eschener, Kat (30 December 2016). "The Story of the Real Canary in the Coal Mine". Smithsonian. Retrieved 11 June 2018.
  3. ^ Leach, William Elford (1819). "Eleventh Room". Synopsis of the Contents of the British Museum (15th ed.). London: British Museum. pp. 63–68 [65]. Although the name of the author is not specified in the document, Leach was the Keeper of Zoology at the time.
  4. ^ Bock, Walter J. (1994). History and Nomenclature of Avian Family-Group Names. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. Vol. 222. New York: American Museum of Natural History. pp. 156, 245. hdl:2246/830.
  5. ^ a b c d e Zuccon, Dario; Prŷs-Jones, Robert; Rasmussen, Pamela C.; Ericson, Per G.P. (February 2012). "The phylogenetic relationships and generic limits of finches (Fringillidae)" (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 62 (2): 581–596. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2011.10.002. PMID 22023825. (PDF) from the original on 2015-06-10.
  6. ^ Paynter, Raymond A. Jnr., ed. (1968). Check-list of birds of the world, Volume 14. Vol. 14. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Museum of Comparative Zoology. p. 207. from the original on 2015-07-15.
  7. ^ Banks, Richard C.; Cicero, Carla; Dunn, Jon L.; Kratter, Andrew W.; Rasmussen, Pamela C.; Remsen, J.V. Jr.; Rising, James D.; Stotz, Douglas F. (2003). "Forty-fourth supplement to the American Ornithologists' Union Check-List of North American Birds". The Auk. 120 (3): 923–931. doi:10.1642/0004-8038(2003)120[0923:FSTTAO]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 86031929.
  8. ^ a b c d e Gill, Frank; Donsker, David (eds.). "Finches, euphonias". World Bird List Version 5.3. International Ornithologists' Union. from the original on 26 June 2015. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  9. ^ Arnaiz-Villena, A.; Guillén, J.; Ruiz-del-Valle, V.; Lowy, E.; Zamora, J.; Varela, P.; Stefani, D.; Allende, L.M. (July 2001). "Phylogeography of crossbills, bullfinches, grosbeaks, and rosefinches". Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences. 58 (8): 1159–1166. doi:10.1007/PL00000930. PMID 11529508. S2CID 6241573.
  10. ^ Nguembock, B.; Fjeldså, J.; Couloux, A.; Pasquet, E. (May 2009). "Molecular phylogeny of Carduelinae (Aves, Passeriformes, Fringillidae) proves polyphyletic origin of the genera Serinus and Carduelis and suggests redefined generic limits". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 51 (2): 169–181. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2008.10.022. PMID 19027082.
  11. ^ Groth, J. (July 2000). "Molecular evidence for the systematic position of Urocynchramus pylzowi". The Auk. 117 (3): 787–792. doi:10.1642/0004-8038(2000)117[0787:MEFTSP]2.0.CO;2. JSTOR 4089604. S2CID 86164717. from the original on 2014-02-25.
  12. ^ Lerner, Heather R.L.; Meyer, Matthias; James, Helen F.; Hofreiter, Michael; Fleischer, Robert C. (2011-11-08). "Multilocus Resolution of Phylogeny and Timescale in the Extant Adaptive Radiation of Hawaiian Honeycreepers". Current Biology. 21 (21): 1838–1844. Bibcode:2011CBio...21.1838L. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2011.09.039. ISSN 0960-9822. PMID 22018543.
  13. ^ "A consensus taxonomy for the Hawaiian honeycreepers » Malama Mauna Kea Library Catalog" (PDF). lsu.edu. (PDF) from the original on 2015-09-19. Retrieved 2022-06-28.
  14. ^ Tietze, D.T.; Päckert, M.; Martens, J.; Lehmann, H.; Sun, Y.-H. (September 2013). "Complete phylogeny and historical biogeography of true rosefinches (Aves: Carpodacus)". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 169: 215–234. doi:10.1111/zoj.12057.
  15. ^ Hír et al. (2001), Mlíkovský (2002)
  16. ^ Zamora, Jorge; Lowy, E.; Ruiz-del-Valle, V.; Moscoso, J.; Serrano-Vela, J. I.; Rivero-de-Aguilar, J.; Arnaiz-Villena, A. (July 2006). . J Ornithol. 147: 448–56. doi:10.1007/s10336-005-0036-2. S2CID 8771417. Archived from the original on 2013-07-03. Retrieved 2013-03-07.
  17. ^ Arnaiz-Villena, A.; Gómez-Prieto, P.; Ruiz-de-Valle, V. (2009). . Animal Genetics. Nova Science Publishers. ISBN 978-1-60741-844-3. Archived from the original on 2012-09-02.
  18. ^ Finches and Sparrows by Peter Clement. Princeton University Press (1999). ISBN 978-0691048789.
  19. ^ CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses by John B. Dunning Jr. (Editor). CRC Press (1992), ISBN 978-0-8493-4258-5.

Sources edit

  • Clement, Peter; Harris, Alan & Davis, John (1993): Finches and Sparrows: an identification guide. Christopher Helm, London. ISBN 0-7136-8017-2
  • Hír, János; Kókay, József; Venczel, Márton; Gál, Erika; Kessler, Eugén (2001). "Elõzetes beszámoló a felsõtárkányi "Güdör-kert" n. õslénytani lelõhelykomplex újravizsgálatáról [A preliminary report on the revised investigation of the paleontological locality-complex "Güdör-kert" at Felsõtárkány, Northern Hungary]". Folia Historico Naturalia Musei Matraensis (in Hungarian). 25: 41–64.
  • Jønsson, Knud A.; Fjeldså, Jon (2006). "A phylogenetic supertree of oscine passerine birds (Aves: Passeri)". Zool. Scripta. 35 (2): 149–186. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6409.2006.00221.x. S2CID 85317440.
  • Marten, Jill A.; Johnson, Ned K. (1986). "Genetic relationships of North American cardueline finches" (PDF). Condor. 88 (4): 409–420. doi:10.2307/1368266. JSTOR 1368266. (PDF) from the original on 2014-02-22.
  • Newton, Ian (1973): Finches (New Naturalist series). Taplinger Publishing. ISBN 0-8008-2720-1

External links edit

  • Internet Bird Collection.com: Finch videos, photos, and sounds
  • National Finch and Softbill Society website — organization promoting finch breeding.
  • "Finch" . The New Student's Reference Work . 1914.

finch, other, uses, disambiguation, true, finches, small, medium, sized, passerine, birds, family, fringillidae, generally, have, stout, conical, bills, adapted, eating, seeds, nuts, often, have, colourful, plumage, they, occupy, great, range, habitats, where,. For other uses see Finch disambiguation The true finches are small to medium sized passerine birds in the family Fringillidae Finches generally have stout conical bills adapted for eating seeds and nuts and often have colourful plumage They occupy a great range of habitats where they are usually resident and do not migrate They have a worldwide native distribution except for Australia and the polar regions The family Fringillidae contains more than two hundred species divided into fifty genera It includes the canaries siskins redpolls serins grosbeaks and euphonias as well as the morphologically divergent Hawaiian honeycreepers Finch Eurasian bullfinch female above male below Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Passeriformes Superfamily Passeroidea Family FringillidaeLeach 1819 Type genus FringillaLinnaeus 1758 Subfamilies FringillinaeCarduelinaeEuphoniinae Many birds in other families are also commonly called finches These groups include the estrildid finches Estrildidae of the Old World tropics and Australia some members of the Old World bunting family Emberizidae and the New World sparrow family Passerellidae and the Darwin s finches of the Galapagos islands now considered members of the tanager family Thraupidae 1 Finches and canaries were used in the UK US and Canada in the coal mining industry to detect carbon monoxide from the eighteenth to twentieth century This practice ceased in the UK in 1986 2 Contents 1 Systematics and taxonomy 1 1 Fossil record 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour 5 List of genera 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 References 9 Sources 10 External linksSystematics and taxonomy editThe name Fringillidae for the finch family was introduced in 1819 by the English zoologist William Elford Leach in a guide to the contents of the British Museum 3 4 The taxonomy of the family in particular the cardueline finches has a long and complicated history The study of the relationship between the taxa has been confounded by the recurrence of similar morphologies due to the convergence of species occupying similar niches 5 In 1968 the American ornithologist Raymond Andrew Paynter Jr wrote Limits of the genera and relationships among the species are less understood and subject to more controversy in the carduelines than in any other species of passerines with the possible exception of the estrildines waxbills 6 Beginning around 1990 a series of phylogenetic studies based on mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences resulted in substantial revisions in the taxonomy Several groups of birds that had previously been assigned to other families were found to be related to the finches The Neotropical Euphonia and the Chlorophonia were formerly placed in the tanager family Thraupidae due to their similar appearance but analysis of mitochondrial DNA sequences revealed that both genera were more closely related to the finches They are now placed in a separate subfamily Euphoniinae within the Fringillidae 7 8 The Hawaiian honeycreepers were at one time placed in their own family Drepanididae but were found to be closely related to the Carpodacus rosefinches and are now placed within the Carduelinae subfamily 5 The three largest genera Carpodacus Carduelis and Serinus were found to be polyphyletic 5 9 10 Each was split into monophyletic genera The American rosefinches were moved from Carpodacus to Haemorhous Carduelis was split by moving the greenfinches to Chloris and a large clade into Spinus leaving just three species in the original genus Thirty seven species were moved from Serinus to Crithagra leaving eight species in the original genus 8 Today the family Fringillidae is divided into three subfamilies the Fringillinae containing a single genus with the chaffinches the Carduelinae containing 183 species divided into 49 genera and the Euphoniinae containing the Euphonia and the Chlorophonia 5 nbsp Euphonias like this thick billed euphonia were once treated as tanagers instead of finches Although Przewalski s rosefinch Urocynchramus pylzowi has ten primary flight feathers rather than the nine primaries of other finches it was sometimes classified in the Carduelinae It is now assigned to a distinct family Urocynchramidae monotypic as to genus and species and with no particularly close relatives among the Passeroidea 8 11 Finch phylogeny Fringillinae Fringilla chaffinches Euphoniinae Chlorophonia chlorophonias and some euphonias Euphonia true euphonias Carduelinae Mycerobas Asian grosbeaks Hesperiphona American grosbeaks Coccothraustes hawfinch Eophona Oriental grosbeaks Carpodacus Eurasian rosefinches Hawaiian Melamprosops the extinct poʻouli Oreomystis ʻakikiki Paroreomyza ʻalauahios and the extinct kakawahie Dysmorodrepanis the extinct Lanai hookbill Psittirostra the possibly extinct ʻōʻu Chloridops the extinct Hawaiian grosbeaks Loxioides palila Rhodacanthis the extinct koa finches Telespiza Laysan amp Nihoa finches Ciridops the extinct ʻula ʻai hawane Drepanis ʻiʻiwi and the extinct mamos Himatione ʻapapane and the extinct Laysan honeycreeper Palmeria ʻakohekohe Pseudonestor Maui parrotbill or kiwikiu Akialoa the extinct ʻakialoas Hemignathus ʻakiapōlaʻau and the possibly extinct nukupuʻus Magumma ʻanianiau Viridonia the extinct greater ʻamakihi could fall anywhere within this clade Chlorodrepanis lesser ʻamakihis Loxops akepas ʻakekeʻe and ʻalawi honeycreepers Pinicola pine grosbeak Pyrrhula bullfinches Bucanetes trumpeter and Mongolian finch Rhodopechys crimson winged finches Leucosticte mountain finches Procarduelis dark breasted rosefinch Agraphospiza Blanford s rosefinch Callacanthis spectacled finch Pyrrhoplectes golden naped finch Haemorhous North American rosefinches Chloris greenfinches Rhodospiza desert finch Rhynchostruthus golden winged grosbeaks Crithagra African canaries serins and siskins Linurgus oriole finch Linaria twite and linnets Acanthis redpolls Loxia crossbills Carduelis European goldfinch etc Chrysocorythus mountain serin Serinus European serin Atlantic canary etc Spinus American siskins amp goldfinches Eurasian siskin and Tibetan serin Cladogram based on the analysis by Zuccon and colleagues published in 2012 5 Hawaiian honeycreeper phylogeny based on Lerner and colleagues 2011 12 and Pratt 2014 13 Genera or clades with question marks are of controversial or uncertain taxonomic placement The rosefinches genus Carpodacus is expanded to include the common rosefinch as suggested by Tietze and colleagues 14 and adopted by the International Ornithological Committee 8 Fossil record edit Fossil remains of true finches are rare and those that are known can mostly be assigned to extant genera at least Like the other Passeroidea families the true finches seem to be of roughly Middle Miocene origin around 20 to 10 million years ago Ma An unidentifable finch fossil from the Messinian age around 12 to 7 3 million years ago Ma during the Late Miocene subepoch has been found at Polgardi in Hungary 15 16 17 Description editThe smallest classical true finches are the Andean siskin Spinus spinescens at as little as 9 5 cm 3 8 in and the lesser goldfinch Spinus psaltria at as little as 8 g 0 28 oz The largest species is probably the collared grosbeak Mycerobas affinis at up to 24 cm 9 4 in and 83 g 2 9 oz although larger lengths to 25 5 cm 10 0 in in the pine grosbeak Pinicola enucleator and weights to 86 1 g 3 04 oz in the evening grosbeak Hesperiphona vespertina have been recorded in species which are slightly smaller on average 18 19 They typically have strong stubby beaks which in some species can be quite large however Hawaiian honeycreepers are famous for the wide range of bill shapes and sizes brought about by adaptive radiation All true finches have 9 primary remiges and 12 rectrices The basic plumage colour is brownish sometimes greenish many have considerable amounts of black while white plumage is generally absent except as wing bars or other signalling marks Bright yellow and red carotenoid pigments are commonplace in this family and thus blue structural colours are rather rare as the yellow pigments turn the blue color into green Many but by no means all true finches have strong sexual dichromatism the females typically lacking the bright carotenoid markings of males 1 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp American goldfinch Spinus tristis male left and female right in Johnston County North Carolina USA The finches have a near global distribution being found across the Americas Eurasia and Africa as well as some island groups such as the Hawaiian islands They are absent from Australasia Antarctica the Southern Pacific and the islands of the Indian Ocean although some European species have been widely introduced in Australia and New Zealand Finches are typically inhabitants of well wooded areas but some can be found on mountains or even in deserts Behaviour editThe finches are primarily granivorous but euphoniines include considerable amounts of arthropods and berries in their diet and Hawaiian honeycreepers evolved to utilize a wide range of food sources including nectar The diet of Fringillidae nestlings includes a varying amount of small arthropods True finches have a bouncing flight like most small passerines alternating bouts of flapping with gliding on closed wings Most sing well and several are commonly seen cagebirds foremost among these is the domesticated canary Serinus canaria domestica The nests are basket shaped and usually built in trees more rarely in bushes between rocks or on similar substrate 1 List of genera editThe family Fringillidae contains 235 species divided into 50 genera and three subfamilies The subfamily Carduelinae includes 18 extinct Hawaiian honeycreepers and the extinct Bonin grosbeak 8 See List of Fringillidae species for further details Subfamily Fringillinae Fringilla 5 species of chaffinch 2 species of blue chaffinch and the brambling Subfamily Carduelinae Mycerobas 4 Palearctic grosbeaks Coccothraustes 3 species Eophona 2 oriental grosbeaks the Chinese and the Japanese grosbeak Pinicola pine grosbeak Pyrrhula 8 bullfinch species Rhodopechys 2 species the Asian crimson winged finch and the African crimson winged finch Bucanetes trumpeter and the Mongolian finch Agraphospiza Blanford s rosefinch Callacanthis spectacled finch Pyrrhoplectes golden naped finch Procarduelis dark breasted rosefinch Leucosticte 6 species of mountain and rosy finches Carpodacus 28 Palearctic rosefinch species Hawaiian honeycreeper group tribe Drepanidini Melamprosops contains a single extinct species the po ouli Paroreomyza 3 species the Oahu alauahio the Maui alauahio and the extinct kakawahie Oreomystis akikiki Telespiza 4 species the Laysan finch the Nihoa finch and 2 prehistoric species Loxioides 2 species the palila and a prehistoric species Rhodacanthis 2 recently extinct species the lesser and the greater koa finch and 2 prehistoric species Chloridops extinct species the Kona grosbeak Psittirostra ou Dysmorodrepanis extinct species the Lanai hookbill Drepanis 2 extinct species the Hawaii mamo and the black mamo and the extant iiwi Ciridops single recently extinct species the Ula ai hawane and 3 prehistoric species Palmeria contains a single species the akohekohe Himatione 2 species the apapane and the extinct Laysan honeycreeper Viridonia single extinct species the greater amakihi Akialoa 4 recently extinct species and 2 prehistoric species Hemignathus 4 species only one of which is extant Pseudonestor Maui parrotbill Magumma anianiau Loxops 5 species of which one is extinct Chlorodrepanis 3 species the Hawaii Oahu and Kauai amakihi Haemorhous 3 North America rosefinches Chloris 6 greenfinches Rhodospiza desert finch Rhynchostruthus 3 golden winged grosbeaks Linurgus oriole finch Crithagra 37 species of canaries serins and siskins from Africa and the Arabian Peninsula Linaria 4 species including the twite and three linnets Acanthis 3 redpolls Loxia 6 crossbills Chrysocorythus 2 species Carduelis 3 species including the European goldfinch Serinus 8 species including the European serin Spinus 20 species including the North American goldfinches and the Eurasian siskin Subfamily Euphoniinae Euphonia 27 species all with euphonia in their English name Chlorophonia 5 species all with chlorophonia in their English nameGallery edit nbsp Hawfinch Coccothraustes coccothraustes one of the Holarctic grosbeaks nbsp Cassin s finch Haemorhous cassinii an American rosefinch nbsp Pallas rosefinch Carpodacus roseus a true rosefinch nbsp Hooded siskin Spinus magellanicus nbsp ʻIʻiwi Drepanis coccinea a Hawaiian honeycreeper nbsp Male violaceous euphonia Euphonia violacea nbsp European goldfinch Carduelis carduelis nbsp European greenfinch Chloris chloris nbsp Gran Canaria blue chaffinch Fringilla polatzeki nbsp Tenerife blue chaffinch Fringilla teydea nbsp Elegant euphonia Chlorophonia elegantissima nbsp Desert finch Rhodospiza obsoleta nbsp Pine grosbeak Pinicola enucleator nbsp Evening grosbeak Hesperiphona vespertina nbsp Yellow breasted greenfinch Chloris spinoides nbsp Yellow canary Crithagra flaviventris nbsp Streaky seedeater Crithagra striolata nbsp Azores chaffinch Fringilla coelebs moreletti See also editThe Finch Society of AustraliaReferences edit a b c Newton 1973 Clement et al 1993 Eschener Kat 30 December 2016 The Story of the Real Canary in the Coal Mine Smithsonian Retrieved 11 June 2018 Leach William Elford 1819 Eleventh Room Synopsis of the Contents of the British Museum 15th ed London British Museum pp 63 68 65 Although the name of the author is not specified in the document Leach was the Keeper of Zoology at the time Bock Walter J 1994 History and Nomenclature of Avian Family Group Names Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History Vol 222 New York American Museum of Natural History pp 156 245 hdl 2246 830 a b c d e Zuccon Dario Prŷs Jones Robert Rasmussen Pamela C Ericson Per G P February 2012 The phylogenetic relationships and generic limits of finches Fringillidae PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 62 2 581 596 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2011 10 002 PMID 22023825 Archived PDF from the original on 2015 06 10 Paynter Raymond A Jnr ed 1968 Check list of birds of the world Volume 14 Vol 14 Cambridge Massachusetts Museum of Comparative Zoology p 207 Archived from the original on 2015 07 15 Banks Richard C Cicero Carla Dunn Jon L Kratter Andrew W Rasmussen Pamela C Remsen J V Jr Rising James D Stotz Douglas F 2003 Forty fourth supplement to the American Ornithologists Union Check List of North American Birds The Auk 120 3 923 931 doi 10 1642 0004 8038 2003 120 0923 FSTTAO 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 86031929 a b c d e Gill Frank Donsker David eds Finches euphonias World Bird List Version 5 3 International Ornithologists Union Archived from the original on 26 June 2015 Retrieved 23 July 2015 Arnaiz Villena A Guillen J Ruiz del Valle V Lowy E Zamora J Varela P Stefani D Allende L M July 2001 Phylogeography of crossbills bullfinches grosbeaks and rosefinches Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences 58 8 1159 1166 doi 10 1007 PL00000930 PMID 11529508 S2CID 6241573 Nguembock B Fjeldsa J Couloux A Pasquet E May 2009 Molecular phylogeny of Carduelinae Aves Passeriformes Fringillidae proves polyphyletic origin of the genera Serinus and Carduelis and suggests redefined generic limits Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 51 2 169 181 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2008 10 022 PMID 19027082 Groth J July 2000 Molecular evidence for the systematic position of Urocynchramus pylzowi The Auk 117 3 787 792 doi 10 1642 0004 8038 2000 117 0787 MEFTSP 2 0 CO 2 JSTOR 4089604 S2CID 86164717 Archived from the original on 2014 02 25 Lerner Heather R L Meyer Matthias James Helen F Hofreiter Michael Fleischer Robert C 2011 11 08 Multilocus Resolution of Phylogeny and Timescale in the Extant Adaptive Radiation of Hawaiian Honeycreepers Current Biology 21 21 1838 1844 Bibcode 2011CBio 21 1838L doi 10 1016 j cub 2011 09 039 ISSN 0960 9822 PMID 22018543 A consensus taxonomy for the Hawaiian honeycreepers Malama Mauna Kea Library Catalog PDF lsu edu Archived PDF from the original on 2015 09 19 Retrieved 2022 06 28 Tietze D T Packert M Martens J Lehmann H Sun Y H September 2013 Complete phylogeny and historical biogeography of true rosefinches Aves Carpodacus Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 169 215 234 doi 10 1111 zoj 12057 Hir et al 2001 Mlikovsky 2002 Zamora Jorge Lowy E Ruiz del Valle V Moscoso J Serrano Vela J I Rivero de Aguilar J Arnaiz Villena A July 2006 Rhodopechys obsoleta desert finch a pale ancestor of greenfinches according to molecular phylogeny J Ornithol 147 448 56 doi 10 1007 s10336 005 0036 2 S2CID 8771417 Archived from the original on 2013 07 03 Retrieved 2013 03 07 Arnaiz Villena A Gomez Prieto P Ruiz de Valle V 2009 Phylogeography of finches and sparrows Animal Genetics Nova Science Publishers ISBN 978 1 60741 844 3 Archived from the original on 2012 09 02 Finches and Sparrows by Peter Clement Princeton University Press 1999 ISBN 978 0691048789 CRC Handbook of Avian Body Masses by John B Dunning Jr Editor CRC Press 1992 ISBN 978 0 8493 4258 5 Sources editClement Peter Harris Alan amp Davis John 1993 Finches and Sparrows an identification guide Christopher Helm London ISBN 0 7136 8017 2 Hir Janos Kokay Jozsef Venczel Marton Gal Erika Kessler Eugen 2001 Elozetes beszamolo a felsotarkanyi Gudor kert n oslenytani lelohelykomplex ujravizsgalatarol A preliminary report on the revised investigation of the paleontological locality complex Gudor kert at Felsotarkany Northern Hungary Folia Historico Naturalia Musei Matraensis in Hungarian 25 41 64 Jonsson Knud A Fjeldsa Jon 2006 A phylogenetic supertree of oscine passerine birds Aves Passeri Zool Scripta 35 2 149 186 doi 10 1111 j 1463 6409 2006 00221 x S2CID 85317440 Marten Jill A Johnson Ned K 1986 Genetic relationships of North American cardueline finches PDF Condor 88 4 409 420 doi 10 2307 1368266 JSTOR 1368266 Archived PDF from the original on 2014 02 22 Newton Ian 1973 Finches New Naturalist series Taplinger Publishing ISBN 0 8008 2720 1External links edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Finch Internet Bird Collection com Finch videos photos and sounds National Finch and Softbill Society website organization promoting finch breeding Finch The New Student s Reference Work 1914 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fringillidae Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Finch amp oldid 1218236401, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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