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	 Finch (Family: Fringillidae) - Wiki
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| Subject: | Finch (Family: Fringillidae) - Wiki 
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^o^| Finch
 From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 
 Scientific classification
 Kingdom: Animalia
 Phylum: Chordata
 Class: Aves
 Order: Passeriformes
 Family: Fringillidae Vigors, 1825
 
 [Photo] Madeira Chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs madeirensis). Photo by Markus Ferch. Date 07.08.2006. Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Chaffinch_Madeira.jpg
 
 Finches are passerine birds, often seed-eating, found chiefly in the northern hemisphere and Africa. One subfamily is endemic to the Neotropics. The family scientific name Fringillidae comes from the Latin word "fringilla", meaning chaffinch, a member of this family that is common in Europe. 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 (Groth 2000).
 
 "Classic" or true finches are small to moderately large and have 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. The true finches range in size from the Andean Siskin (Carduelis spinescens), at 9.5 cm (3.8 inches) and 8.4 g., to the Collared Grosbeak (Mycerobas affinis), at nearly 23 cm (9 inches) and 79 g. (2.8 oz).
 
 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 natural selection.
 
 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 four 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 in 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 sensu lato - Canaries, seedeaters, serins and African siskins
 (Sub)Genus Serinus sensu stricto - European Serin and relatives.
 (Sub)Genus Crithagra - Afrotropical Canaries, Seedeaters, Citrils etc.
 
 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 - polyphyletic? (Hawfinch may belong in Fringillinae).
 Genus Pyrrhoplectes - Gold-naped Finch
 Genus Chaunoproctus - Bonin Grosbeak (extinct)
 Genus Callacanthis - Spectacled Finch
 Genus Neospiza - Sao Tom?? Grosbeak
 Genus Linurgus - Oriole Finch
 Genus Rhynchostruthus - Golden-winged Grosbeak
 
 Subfamily Euphoniinae - Euphonious finches; endemic to the Neotropics; formerly treated in Thraupidae.
 Genus Euphonia, the euphonias
 Genus Chlorophonia, the chlorophonias
 
 More Photos at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:Fringillidae
 
 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Finch
 
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