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Finches are
passerine
birds, often seed-eating, found chiefly in the northern
hemisphere and Africa. One subfamily is endemic to the
Neotropics. The taxonomic structure of the true finch
family, Fringillidae, is somewhat disputed, with some
including the Hawaiian honeycreepers as another subfamily (Drepanidinae)
and/or uniting the cardueline and fringilline finches as
tribes (Carduelini and Fringillini) in one subfamily; the
euphonious finches were thought to be tanagers due to
general similarity in appearance and mode of life until
their real affinities were realized; the buntings and
American sparrows were formerly considered another subfamily
(Emberizinae). Przewalski's "Rosefinch" (Urocynchramus
pylzowi) is now classified as a distinct, monotypic family with no particularly close relatives.
"Classic" or true finches are small to moderately large
and have a strong, stubby
beaks, which in some species can be quite large. All
have 12 tail feathers and 9 primaries. They have a bouncing
flight, alternating bouts of flapping with gliding on closed
wings, and most sing well. Their nests are basket-shaped and
built in trees.
There are many birds in other families which are often
called finches. These include many species in the very
similar-looking Estrildids or waxbill family, which occur in the Old World tropics and
Australia. Several groups of the
Emberizidae family (buntings and American sparrows) are
also named as finches, including the
Darwin's finches of the
Galapagos islands, which provided evidence of Darwin's
theory of evolution.
Systematics
The systematics of the cardueline finches are
contentious. The layout presented here follows the molecular
studies of Marten & Johnson (1986) and Arnaiz-Villena et
al. (1998, 2001), and takes into account the traditional
splitting of the genus Carduelis. The exact position
of several genera in the cardueline sequence is tentative.
FAMILY FRINGILLIDAE
Subfamily Fringillinae - Fringilline
finches; contains only three species, which feed their
young on insects rather than seeds.
Genus
Fringilla - Bramblings and chaffinches
Chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs)
Blue Chaffinch (Fringilla teydea)
Brambling (Fringilla montifringilla)
Subfamily Carduelinae - Cardueline
finches; a much larger group that contains several
genera which feed their young on seeds.
Genus Eophona - Oriental grosbeaks
Genus Mycerobas - Mycerobas Grosbeaks
Genus Pinicola - Pine grosbeak
Genus Pyrrhula - Bullfinches
Genus Leucosticte - Mountain finches
Genus N.N. - Dark-breasted Rosefinch, "Carpodacus"
nipalensis (possibly belongs into Fringillinae)
Genus Carpodacus - Rosefinches (may be 2 or 3
genera; probably includes Haematospiza and possibly
also Uragus)
Genus Haematospiza - Scarlet Finch
Genus Uragus - Streaked rosefinches
Genus Serinus - Canaries, seedeaters, serins and
African siskins
Genus Carduelis sensu lato
(Sub)Genus Carduelis sensu stricto - Linnets,
goldfinches, twite and cardueline siskins.
(Sub)Genus Chloris - greenfinches and desert finch
(Sub)Genus Acanthis - redpolls
(Sub)Genus Loxia - Crossbills
Genus Rhodopechys - Trumpeter Finch and
relatives
Genus Coccothraustes - Hawfinch, Evening Grosbeak
Genus Pyrrhoplectes - Gold-naped Finch
Genus Chaunoproctus - Bonin Grosbeak (extinct)
Genus Callacanthis - Spectacled Finch
Genus Neospiza - Sao Tomé Grosbeak
Genus Linurgus - Oriole Finch
Genus Rhynchostruthus - Golden-winged Grosbeak
Subfamily
Euphoniinae - Euphonious finches; endemic
to the Neotropics; formerly treated in
Thraupidae.
Arnaiz-Villena, A.; Álvarez-Tejado, M.;
Ruiz-del-Valle, V.; García-de-la-Torre, C.; Varela, P.;
Recio, M. J.; Ferre. S. & Martínez-Laso, J. (1998):
Phylogeny and rapid Northern and Southern Hemisphere
speciation of goldfinches during the Miocene and
Pliocene Epochs. Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences54(9): 1031–1041.
DOI:10.1007/s000180050230
PDF fulltext. Erratum, Cellular and Molecular
Life Sciences55(1): 148.
DOI:10.1007/s000180050280
PDF fulltext
Arnaiz-Villena, A.; Guillén, J.;
Ruiz-del-Valle, V.; Lowy, E.; Zamora, J.; Varela, P.;
Stefani, D. & Allende, L. M. (2001): Phylogeography of
crossbills, bullfinches, grosbeaks, and rosefinches.
Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences58:
1159–1166.
PDF fulltext
Clement, Peter; Harris, Alan & Davis, John
(1993): Finches and Sparrows: an identification guide.
Christopher Helm, London.
ISBN 0-7136-8017-2
Marten, Jill A. & Johnson, Ned K.
(1986): Genetic relationships of North American
cardueline finches.
Condor88(4): 409-420.
PDF fulltext