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New on 500px : Just a Finch by Marc-PeterKooistra by Marc-PeterKooistra

Just a Chaffinch with his reflection in the rain

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New on 500px : Pine Siskin 8469 by wmccormack by wmccormack

Pine Siskin
Adult Male

While these little finches are reported as widespread right across North America, it took me six years to find one. For some reason, they aren’t seen in my part of the Niagara Peninsula, and it took me eight trips to Algonquin Park before I finally encountered a flock of about 140 Siskins last weekend. Their annual travels are notoriously unpredictable. Like Redpolls, Siskins move across the continent based on the presence of their favourite food supplies. They might be seen in an area one year, and not the next. Irruptions are common.

Siskins are tiny, only about four inches long and they weigh less than half an ounce. These amazingly camouflaged birds so closely resemble a pine cone or a cluster of pine needles that they can disappear instantly inside a tree if a predator is detected.

Their preferred summer habitats are the conifer forests of Northern Canada.

As members of the Finch family, these little birds don’t crush seeds. Even though their bills are slender and less stout-looking than most finches, Siskins still use them to cut open the seed’s hull, wrap the inner fruit with their tongue, and swallow it. As their name suggests, Pine Siskins have a fondness for the seeds of pines and other conifers like cedars, larch, hemlock, and spruce.

The North American Breeding Bird Survey found that Pine Siskin populations have declined by 5% per year between 1966 and 2014, resulting in a cumulative decline of 90%.

Algonquin Park
Ontario, Canada

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New on 500px : Roselin pourpré / Purple Finch by mgauvin by mgauvin

Souvenir de l’hiver qui nous quitte.

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New on 500px : Brambling by marioseveri by marioseveri

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New on 500px : Coming in for a Landing by dragonwingimages by dragonwingimages

House finch antics on an early winter morning.

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New on 500px : Blue-breasted cordon-bleu by Marc_Mol by Marc_Mol

The blue waxbill (Uraeginthus angolensis), also called blue-breasted cordon-bleu, is a common species of estrildid finch found in East/Southern Africa.
Ruaha Nat Park

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New on 500px : Looking Back At You by cherylorraine by cherylorraine

Male House Finch by Cherylorraine Smith.

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New on 500px : Goldfinch by DenisKeith by DenisKeith

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New on 500px : House Finch by TomEspinoza by TomEspinoza

A common, yet colorful bird, that is a regular at my feeders.

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New on 500px : Red browed Finch by jonhawton by jonhawton

An aptly named bird that paid a visit to my yard

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New on 500px : Purple Finch (male) by CaoLin by CaoLin