Peg-billed Finch

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

iPeg-billed Finch
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Emberizidae
Genus: Acanthidops
Ridgway, 1882
Species: A. bairdii
Binomial name
Acanthidops bairdii
Ridgway, 1882

The Peg-billed Finch, Acanthidops bairdii, is a passerine bird which is endemic to the highlands of Costa Rica and extrene western Panama. Despite its name, it is not a true finch, but rather a member of the large Emberizidae family, which also includes buntings, American sparrows, juncos and towhees. It is the only member of the genus Acanthidops.

This is an uncommon bird at the edges and clearings of mountain forests, and in scrubby second growth, bamboo clumps, and bushy pastures from 1500 m altitude to the timberline. In the wet season it can descend to 1200 m altitude. Its numbers have reported to be high when the bamboo is flowering on favoured sites such as Cerro de la Muerte.

The nest, built by the female, is a cup of plant material into which she lays typically four eggs. The female alone incubates for 12-14 days to hatching.

The Peg-billed Finch is a long-tailed species, 13.5 cm long and weighing 16 g. It hasa a distinctive long upturned bill with a black upper mandible and yellow lower mandible. The adult male is slate grey, becoming paler on the belly. The female is olive-brown above, becoming paler below and with a grey tinge to the head and upper back. She has bright cinnamon wing bars and buff supercilia. Young birds are similar to the female, but have paler plumage and weaker wing bars.

The Peg-billed Finch has a dry pzeek call, and the male’s song consists of high whistled notes ending with a buzz, chee shee shee shee paah.

The Peg-billed Finch feeds on insects and spiders, grass and bamboo seeds.. It will also squeeze nectar from flowers and juice from berries. It is seen singly, in pairs, family groups or in mixed-species feeding flocks with other small birds suchas warblers.

This species’ scientific name commemorates the American ornithologist Spencer Fullerton Baird.

[edit] References