Cassin's Finch

Cassin's Finch
Sketch: Finch
:Animalia
:Chordata
:Aves
: Passeriformes
:Fringillidae
:Carpodacus
:cassinii
Binomial name
Carpodacus cassinii
Baird, 1854
The Cassin's Finch, Carpodacus cassinii, is a medium-sized finch. Adults have a short forked brown tail and brown wings. They have a longer bill than the Purple Finch. Adult males are raspberry red on the head, breast, back and rump; their back and undertail are streaked. Adult females have light brown upperparts and light underparts with brown streaks throughout; their facial markings are less distinct than those of the female Purple Finch. Their breeding habitat is coniferous forest in mountains of western North America. They nest in a large conifer. Birds from Canada migrate south; other birds are permanent residents. They move to lower elevations in winter. These birds forage in trees, sometimes in ground vegetation. They mainly eat seeds, buds and berries, some insects. When not nesting, they often feed in small flocks. This bird was named after John Cassin, who was a curator at the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
etc
soap bubble
clement vallandigham
bat out of hell
esther phillips
gung ho
vera leigh
action dmocratique du qubec
passenger ship
fred h. hale, sr.
separation barrier
worshipful company of vintners
saint tite, quebec
worshipful company of dyers
our lady of knock
try this
tie in novel
conservative grace brethren churches, international
american locomotive company
wolf prize
ham (disambiguation)
epistasis
curtin university of technology
rhodochrosite
muresk
wladislaus ii the exile of poland
worshipful company of bakers
premier of quebec
congress system
argentine tango
midwest connection
adorunta
variation of the field
congressional research service
overblowing
right to die
john f. reynolds
isoelectronic
primero
worshipful company of barbers
list of similarities between canada and new zealand
primo visto
the persistence of memory
bank of the united states