Pine Siskin

Carduelis pinusOrder: PASSERIFORMESFamily: Finches (Fringillidae)
Pine Siskin Portrait
  Splitbar
Range Map for Pine Siskin

Overview

Pine Siskin: Small finch with brown-streaked body. Wings have small patches of yellow and two white wing-bars. Tail is dark, notched, and has small yellow patches. Bill is slender and pointed. Forages on ground and in trees for seeds and insects. Flight is swift and high, travels in compact flocks.

Range and Habitat

Pine Siskin: Breeds from southern Alaska, Mackenzie, Quebec, and Newfoundland south to California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Great Lakes region, and northern New England; wanders southward throughout the U.S. during winter. Preferred habitats include coniferous and deciduous forests, woodlands, parks, shade trees near human habitation, alder thickets, and brushy pastures.

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Listen:

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Voice Text

"ZZZzzzzzzzzzrree"

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Related Birds:

American Goldfinch
House Finch
Lawrence's Goldfinch
Lesser Goldfinch
Cassin's Finch
Oriental Greenfinch
Common Redpoll
.
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Bird Call Credits: The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Martyn Stewart, Redmond, Washington USA. The reuse or copying of bird calls in this database is strictly forbidden.

Family Buntings, Finches, Sparrows (Emberizidae)_blue
Species Carduelis pinus
Length4.5 - 5.25 Inches
Wingspan8.75 Inches

Pine Siskin

Pine Siskin: Small finch with brown-streaked body. Wings have small patches of yellow and two white wing-bars. Tail is dark, notched, and has small yellow patches. Bill is slender and pointed. Forages on ground and in trees for seeds and insects. Flight is swift and high, travels in compact flocks.

● Song: "ZZZzzzzzzzzzrree"

● Foraging & Feeding: Pine Siskin: Eats seeds of alders, birches, spruce, and other trees; also feeds on thistle and other weed seeds, forbs, buds, insects, and spiders. Attracted to salt licks and salt treated highways in the winter; sometimes drinks sap at drill wells created by sapsuckers; forages in trees and on the ground.

● Breeding & nesting: Pine Siskin: Three to five green blue eggs with black and brown spots at large end are laid in a shallow nest made of bark, twigs, and moss. Nest is usually built in a conifer branch 10 to 50 feet above the ground, far out from the trunk. Eggs are incubated for approximately 13 days by the female.

● Similar species: Pine Siskin: House Finch has a stubbier, thicker bill, longer tail with square tip, and lacks yellow on wings and base of tail. Common Redpoll has a red cap, black chin, and lacks yellow on wings and tail.

Flight Pattern

Undulating flight., Alternates several rapid wing beats with wings drawn to sides., Strong high and swift flight.
Pine-Siskin Body Illustration
● Range & Habitat: Pine Siskin: Breeds from southern Alaska, Mackenzie, Quebec, and Newfoundland south to California, Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Great Lakes region, and northern New England; wanders southward throughout the U.S. during winter. Preferred habitats include coniferous and deciduous forests, woodlands, parks, shade trees near human habitation, alder thickets, and brushy pastures.
BreedingMonogamous, Semicolonial
PopulationWidespread, Abundant
MigrationMigratory
Weight0.5 Ounces