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ViewsPurple FinchFrom Opus
[edit] Description6 ins (15.5 cm)
Female
Like the House Finch, it has a rare golden-yellow variant of the normal red plumage. [edit] Similar SpeciesHouse Finch has brown streaks on belly, less red on head, smaller bill, longer tail, and different call. Cassin's Finch has a paler throat and breast, streaked undertail coverts, and larger bill. [edit] DistributionCanada and both the western and eastern United States. Winters south as far as the U.S.-Mexico border. [edit] TaxonomyPolytypic. Consists of two subspecies:1
[edit] HabitatConiferous and mixed forest, as well as various wooded areas along the U.S. Pacific coast. [edit] Behaviour[edit] DietThese birds forage in trees and bushes, sometimes in ground vegetation. They mainly eat seeds, berries, buds and blossoms, usually from outer branches of trees and sometimes from the ground. [edit] BreedingThe nest, a cup of twigs and grass and usually lined with hair, is built in a conifer. 3-5 light greenish blue eggs, marked with brown and black, are incubated for 13 days by the female. [edit] VocalisationSong is a mellow, rich warbling. Call is a sharp pik in flight. [edit] DiscussionThis bird has been displaced from some habitat by House Sparrows and then the introduction of House Finches in the east. This is the state bird of New Hampshire. [edit] References[edit] External Links
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