Pine Siskin

Pine Siskin

Taxobox
name = Pine Siskin
status = LC | status_system = IUCN3.1


regnum = Animalia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Aves
ordo = Passeriformes
familia = Fringillidae
genus = "Carduelis"
species = "C. pinus"
binomial = "Carduelis pinus"
binomial_authority = (Wilson, 1810)
The Pine Siskin, "Carduelis pinus", is a small finch.

Description

Adults are brown on the upperparts and pale on the underparts, with heavy streaking throughout. They have a short forked tail. They have yellow patches in their wings and tail, not always visible; otherwise, it appears to be a very small streaked sparrow.

Distribution and habitat

Their breeding habitat is across Canada, Alaska and the western mountains and northern parts of the United States. The nest is well-hidden on a horizontal branch of a tree, often a conifer.

Migration by this bird is highly variable, probably related to food supply. Large numbers may move south in some years; hardly any in others.

Behavior

Feeding

These birds forage in trees, shrubs and weeds. They mainly eat seeds, plant parts and some insects. In winter, they often feed in mixed flocks including American Goldfinches and redpolls.

Small seeds, especially thistle, red alder, birch, and spruce seeds, make up the majority of the Pine Siskin's diet. In summer, they will eat insects, especially aphids, which they feed to the young, but seeds dominate their diet.

Conservation Status

Although considered Washington's most common finch, the Pine Siskin has suffered a significant annual decline in population since 1966, according to the Breeding Bird Survey. Due to the irruptive nature of this species, populations vary widely from year to year, and trends can be difficult to interpret. Parasitism by Brown-headed Cowbirds can have a significant impact on Pine Siskin productivity, and forest fragmentation has increased their contact with cowbirds. Maintaining large tracts of coniferous forest will help keep this bird common.

Interesting Pine Siskin Facts

• The name Siskin is derived from its sound or chirp. Thus, this bird’s common name is really “pine chirper” • Pine Siskins are very social birds. They will build nests adjacent to each other, with only a few feet in between them. • When eating from conifers, the Pine Siskin usually hangs upside down from the tips of the trees.

References

* Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
* Interesting Pine Siskin Facts donated by [http://www.birdhouses101.com/pine-siskin.asp BirdHouses101.com]

Further reading

Book

* Dawson, W. R. 1997. "Pine Siskin (Carduelis pinus)". In "The Birds of North America", No. 280 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, PA, and The American Ornithologists’ Union, Washington, D.C.

Articles

* Astheimer L, Ramenofsky M, Wingfield JC & Buttemer W. (1989). "Corticosterone Feeding Behavior and Food Deprivation in Passerine Birds". American Zoologist. vol 29, no 4.

* Astheimer LB, Buttemer WA & Wingfield JC. (1992). "Interactions of corticosterone with feeding, activity and metabolism in passerine birds". Ornis Scandinavica. vol 23, no 3. p. 355-365.

* Balph DF & Balph MH. (1979). "Behavioral Flexibility of Pine Siskins in Mixed Species Foraging Groups". Condor. vol 81, no 2. p. 211-212.

* Benkman CW & Lindholm AK. (1991). "The Advantages and Evolution of a Morphological Novelty". Nature. vol 349, no 6309. p. 519-520.

* Bennetts RE & Hutto RL. (1985). "Attraction of Social Fringillids to Mineral Salts an Experimental Study". Journal of Field Ornithology. vol 56, no 2. p. 187-189.

* Bledsoe AH. (1988). "Nuclear DNA Evolution and Phylogeny of the New World Nine-Primaried Oscines". Auk. vol 105, no 3. p. 504-515.

* Brogden KA & Packer RA. (1979). "Comparison of Pasteurella-Multocida Serotyping Systems". American Journal of Veterinary Research. vol 40, no 9. p. 1332-1335.

* Brown WB. (1986). "Late Pine Siskins in Ben Hill County Georgia USA". Oriole. vol 51, no 2-3.

* Buttemer WA, Astheimer LB & Wingfield JC. (1991). "The Effect of Corticosterone on Standard Metabolic Rates of Small Passerine Birds". Journal of Comparative Physiology B Biochemical Systemic & Environmental Physiology. vol 161, no 4. p. 427-432.

* Cook AG. (1984). "Birds of the Desert Region of Uintah County Utah USA". Great Basin Naturalist. vol 44, no 4. p. 584-620.

* Dawson WR & Marsh RL. (1986). "Winter Fattening in the American Goldfinch Carduelis-Tristis and the Possible Role of Temperature in Its Regulation". Physiological Zoology. vol 59, no 3. p. 357-368.

* Dieni JS & Anderson SH. (1999). "Effects of recent burning on breeding bird community structure in aspen forests". Journal of Field Ornithology. vol 70, no 4. p. 491-503.

* Elder DH. (2001). "Forest tent caterpillars and birds". Ontario Birds. vol 19, no 2. p. 87-88.

* Erickson WR. (2004). "Bird communities of the garry oak habitat in southwestern British Columbia". Canadian Field Naturalist. vol 118, no 3. p. 376-385.

* Farmer KL, Hill GE & Roberts SR. (2005). "Susceptibility of wild songbirds to the house finch strain of Mycoplasma gallisepticum". Journal of Wildlife Diseases. vol 41, no 2. p. 317-325.

* Hahn TP, Pereyra ME & Sharbaugh SM. (2003). "Effects of photoperiod on brain GnRH plasticity and peripheral reproductive physiology in three species of cardueline finches". Society for Neuroscience Abstract Viewer & Itinerary Planner. p. 611.

* Hahn TP, Pereyra ME, Sharbaugh SM & Bentley GE. (2004). "Physiological responses to photoperiod in three cardueline finch species". General & Comparative Endocrinology. vol 137, no 1. p. 99-108.

* Hahn TP, Pereyra ME, Sharbaugh SM & Morton ML. (2002). "Reproductive responses to long and short days in three high latitude species of cardueline finches". Hormones & Behavior. vol 41, no 4.

* Hejl SJ, Mack DE, Young JS, Bednarz JC & Hutto RL. (2002). "Birds and changing landscape patterns in conifer forests of the north-central Rocky Mountains". Studies in Avian Biology. vol 25, p. 113-129.

* Herbers JR, Serrouya R & Maxcy KA. (2004). "Effects of elevation and forest cover on winter birds in mature forest ecosystems of southern British Columbia". Canadian Journal of Zoology. vol 82, no 11. p. 1720-1730.

* Hill GE & McGraw KI. (2004). "Correlated changes in male plumage coloration and female mate choice in cardueline finches". Animal Behaviour. vol 67, no 1. p. 27-35.

* Hobson KA & Bayne E. (2000). "Breeding bird communities in boreal forest of western Canada: Consequences of "unmixing" the mixedwoods". Condor. vol 102, no 4. p. 759-769.

* Hobson KA & Schieck J. (1999). "Changes in bird communities in boreal mixedwood forest: Harvest and wildfire effects over 30 years". Ecological Applications. vol 9, no 3. p. 849-863.

* Jennings DT & Crawford HS. (1983). "Pine Siskin Preys on Egg Masses of the Spruce Budworm Choristoneura-Fumiferana Lepidoptera Tortricidae". Canadian Entomologist. vol 115, no 4. p. 439-440.

* Jim S & Keith AH. (2000). "Bird communities associated with live residual tree patches within cut blocks and burned habitat in mixedwood boreal forests". Canadian Journal of Forest Research. vol 30, no 8. p. 1281.

* Kaufman K. (1993). "Notes on goldfinch identification". American Birds. vol 47, no 1. p. 159-162.

* Keller ME & Anderson SH. (1992). "Avian Use of Habitat Configurations Created by Forest Cutting in Southeastern Wyoming". Condor. vol 94, no 1. p. 55-65.

* Koenig WD. (2001). "Synchrony and periodicity of eruptions by boreal birds". Condor. vol 103, no 4. p. 725-735.

* Koenig WD & Knops JMH. (2001). "Seed-crop size and eruptions of North American boreal seed-eating birds". Journal of Animal Ecology. vol 70, no 4. p. 609-620.

* Kubisz MA. (1989). "Burdock as a Hazard to Golden-Crowned Kinglets and Other Small Birds". Ontario Birds. vol 7, no 3. p. 112-114.

* Lagory KE, Lagory MK, Meyers DM & Herman SG. (1984). "Niche Relationships in Wintering Mixed Species Flocks in Western Washington USA". Wilson Bulletin. vol 96, no 1. p. 108-116.

* Langelier LA & Garton EO. (1986). "Management Guidelines for Increasing Populations of Birds That Feed on Western Spruce Budworm". U S Department of Agriculture Handbook. vol 653, p. 1-19.

* Larson DL & Bock CE. (1986). "Eruptions of Some North American Boreal Seed-Eating Birds 1901-1980". Ibis. vol 128, no 1. p. 137-140.

* Lawler JJ, O'Connor RJ, Hunsaker CT, Jones KB, Loveland TR & White D. (2004). "The effects of habitat resolution on models of avian diversity and distributions: a comparison of two land-cover classifications". Landscape Ecology. vol 19, no 5. p. 515-530.

* MacDougall-Shackleton SA & Hahn TP. (1999). "Photorefractoriness and the evolution of reproductive flexibility in cardueline finches". American Zoologist. vol 39, no 5.

* MacDougall-Shackleton SA, Katti M & Hahn TP. (2006). "Tests of absolute photorefractoriness in four species of cardueline finch that differ in reproductive schedule". Journal of Experimental Biology. vol 209, no 19. p. 3786-3794.

* Manuwal DA & Huff MH. (1987). "Spring and Winter Bird Populations in a Douglas-Fir Forest Sere". Journal of Wildlife Management. vol 51, no 3. p. 586-595.

* McLaren IA, Morlan J, Smith PW, Gosselin M & Bailey SE. (1989). "Eurasian Siskins in North America Distinguishing Females from Green-Morph Pine Siskins". American Birds. vol 43, no 5. p. 1268-1274.

* Medin DE. (1984). "Breeding Birds of an Ancient Bristlecone Pine Pinus-Longavo Stand in East Central Nevada USA". Great Basin Naturalist. vol 44, no 2. p. 272-276.

* Mills A. (1986). "Correlations among Winter Finch Numbers at Ottawa Canada 1958-1983". Ontario Birds. vol 4, no 1. p. 30-32.

* Moore T. (1990). "Pine siskins remain until June in Fulton County". Oriole. vol 55, no 2-3.

* Mundinger PC. (1979). "Call Learning in the Carduelinae Ethological and Systematic Considerations". Systematic Zoology. vol 28, no 3. p. 270-283.

* Nagle L, Kreutzer M & Vallet E. (2002). "Adult female canaries respond to male song by calling". Ethology. vol 108, no 5. p. 463-472.

* Oberle MW & Haney JC. (1997). "Possible breeding range extensions of northern forest birds in northeast Georgia". Oriole. vol 62, no 3-4. p. 35-44.

* Pereyra ME, MacDougall-Shackleton SA, Sharbaugh SM, Morton ML, Katti M & Hahn TP. (2001). "Relationships between photorefrac-toriness and reproductive flexibility in cardueline finches". American Zoologist. vol 41, no 6.

* Pereyra ME, Sharbaugh SM & Hahn TP. (2003). "Interspecific variation in photo-induced hypothalamic GnRH plasticity in cardueline finches". Integrative & Comparative Biology. vol 43, no 6.

* Pereyra ME, Sharbaugh SM & Hahn TP. (2005). "Interspecific variation in photo-induced GnRH plasticity among nomadic cardueline finches". Brain Behavior & Evolution. vol 66, no 1. p. 35-49.

* Popp JW. (1988). "Scanning Behavior of Finches in Mixed-Species Groups". Condor. vol 90, no 2. p. 510-512.

* Popp JW. (1989). "Use of Agonistic Displays by Purple Finches During Interspecific Encounters". Bird Behavior. vol 8, no 1. p. 48-50.

* Prescott DRC. (1985). "Feeding at Night by Wintering Pine Siskins Carduelis-Pinus". Journal of Field Ornithology. vol 56, no 4.

* Rohweder MR, McKetta CW & Riggs RA. (2000). "Economic and biological compatibility of timber and wildlife production: an illustrative use of production possibilities frontier". Wildlife Society Bulletin. vol 28, no 2. p. 435-447.

* Roland J, Hannon SJ & Smith MA. (1986). "Foraging Pattern of Pine Siskins Carduelis-Pinus and Its Influence on Winter Moth Operophtera-Brumata Survival in an Apple Orchard". Oecologia. vol 69, no 1. p. 47-52.

* Scott VE & Crouch GL. (1987). "Response of Breeding Birds to Commercial Clearcutting of Aspen in Southwestern Colorado USA". U S Forest Service Research Note RM. vol 475, p. 1-5.

* Tallman DA & Zusi RL. (1984). "A Hybrid Red Crossbill Pine Siskin Loxia-Curvirostra X Carduelis-Pinus and Speculations on the Evolution of Loxia". Auk. vol 101, no 1. p. 155-158.

* Unitt P, Rodriguez Estrella R & Castellanos Vera A. (1992). "Ferruginous hawk and pine siskin in the Sierra De La Laguna, Baja California Sur: Subspecies of the pine siskin in Baja California". Western Birds. vol 23, no 4. p. 171-172.

* Wright DH. (1996). "Intermittent birding at Prince Albert, 1982-1985". Blue Jay. vol 54, no 3.

* Yunick RP. (1976). "DELAYED MOLT IN PINE SISKIN". Bird-Banding. vol 47, no 4. p. 306-309.

* Zamora J, Ernesto L, Ruiz-del-Valle V, Moscoso J, Serrano-Vela JI, Rivero-de-Aguilar J & Arnaiz-Villena A. (2006). "Rhodopechys obsoleta (desert finch): a pale ancestor of greenfinches (Carduelis spp.) according to molecular phylogeny". Journal of Ornithology. vol 147, no 3. p. 448-456.

* Zinkl JG, Henny CJ, Lenhart DJ & Roberts RB. (1980). "Inhibition of Brain Cholin Esterase Activity in Forest Birds and Squirrels Exposed to Aerially Applied Acephate". Bulletin of Environmental Contamination & Toxicology. vol 24, no 5. p. 676-683.

External links

* [http://www.islandlight.ca/showphoto.php?image_id=90 Pine Siskin photo]
* [http://ibc.hbw.com/ibc/phtml/especie.phtml?idEspecie=8833 Pine Siskin videos] on the Internet Bird Collection
* [http://vireo.acnatsci.org/search.html?Form=Search&SEARCHBY=Common&KEYWORDS=pine+siskin&showwhat=images&AGE=All&SEX=All&ACT=All&Search=Search&VIEW=All&ORIENTATION=All&RESULTS=24 Pine Siskin photo gallery] VIREO


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Look at other dictionaries:

  • pine siskin — Siskin Sis kin, n. [Dan. sisgen; cf. Sw. siska, G. zeisig, D. sijsje; of Slav. origin; cf. Pol. czy?.] (Zo[ o]l.) (a) A small green and yellow European finch ({Spinus spinus}, or {Carduelis spinus}); called also {aberdevine}. (b) The American… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • pine siskin — ☆ pine siskin or pine finch n. a small, brown finch (Carduelis pinus) of North America, with yellow markings on the wings and tail …   English World dictionary

  • pine siskin — Pinefinch Pine finch (p[imac]n f[i^]nch ), n. (Zo[ o]l.) (a) A small American bird ({Spinus spinus} syn. {Chrysomitris spinus}); called also {pine siskin}, and {American siskin}. (b) The pine grosbeak. [1913 Webster] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • pine siskin — noun small finch of North American coniferous forests • Syn: ↑pine finch, ↑Spinus pinus • Hypernyms: ↑finch • Member Holonyms: ↑Spinus, ↑genus Spinus * * * noun …   Useful english dictionary

  • pine siskin — paprastasis pušinukas statusas T sritis zoologija | vardynas atitikmenys: lot. Carduelis pinus; Spinus pinus angl. pine siskin vok. Fichtenzeisig, m rus. сосновый чиж, m pranc. tarin des pins, m ryšiai: platesnis terminas – čivyliai sinonimas –… …   Paukščių pavadinimų žodynas

  • pine siskin — pine′ sis kin n. orn a small North American finch, Carduelis pinus, of coniferous forests, having yellow markings on the wings and tail …   From formal English to slang

  • pine siskin — a small, North American finch, Carduelis pinus, of coniferous forests, having yellow markings on the wings and tail. Also called pine finch. [1885 90, Amer.] * * * …   Universalium

  • pine siskin — noun Date: 1887 a North American finch (Carduelis pinus of the family Fringillidae) with streaked plumage …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • Siskin — Sis kin, n. [Dan. sisgen; cf. Sw. siska, G. zeisig, D. sijsje; of Slav. origin; cf. Pol. czy?.] (Zo[ o]l.) (a) A small green and yellow European finch ({Spinus spinus}, or {Carduelis spinus}); called also {aberdevine}. (b) The American pinefinch… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Siskin green — Siskin Sis kin, n. [Dan. sisgen; cf. Sw. siska, G. zeisig, D. sijsje; of Slav. origin; cf. Pol. czy?.] (Zo[ o]l.) (a) A small green and yellow European finch ({Spinus spinus}, or {Carduelis spinus}); called also {aberdevine}. (b) The American… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

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