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Difference between revisions of "Lesser Antillean Bullfinch" - BirdForum Opus

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'''Includes Barbados Bullfinch'''
 
'''Includes Barbados Bullfinch'''
 
==Identification==
 
==Identification==
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[[Image:Female_Lesser_Antillean_Bullfinch_by_NJLarsen.jpg|thumb|350px|right|Female<br />Photo by {{user|NJLarsen|NJLarsen}}<br />Savane Paille, [[Dominica]], September 2008]]
 
Overall black to slate-gray color, interrupted by rufous on the throat, just in front of eye, and in most races on undertail coverts (undertail black in [[Martinique]] and [[St. Lucia]]). The female is a sandy gray-brown with rufous coloring to the wings and tail and greyish underparts. The head of the female is the same color as the mantle. Legs in both sexes are greyish to black, not pink. <br />Male has black bill in most areas, while female has lower mandible yellowish to pale horn; in Barbados, males are dusky horn both upper and lower mandible (and has plumage like female) while females show pale horn on lower mandible.  
 
Overall black to slate-gray color, interrupted by rufous on the throat, just in front of eye, and in most races on undertail coverts (undertail black in [[Martinique]] and [[St. Lucia]]). The female is a sandy gray-brown with rufous coloring to the wings and tail and greyish underparts. The head of the female is the same color as the mantle. Legs in both sexes are greyish to black, not pink. <br />Male has black bill in most areas, while female has lower mandible yellowish to pale horn; in Barbados, males are dusky horn both upper and lower mandible (and has plumage like female) while females show pale horn on lower mandible.  
 
====Similar species====
 
====Similar species====
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==Distribution==
 
==Distribution==
[[Image:Barbados_Bullfinch_by_Dave_B_Smith.jpg|thumb|400px|right|Photo of a Barbados Bullfinch by {{user|Dave+B+Smith|Dave B Smith}}<br />Photographed in [[Barbados]].<br />Females of other populations look similar to this. ]]
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[[Image:Barbados_Bullfinch_by_Dave_B_Smith.jpg|thumb|400px|right|Barbados Bullfinch (probably male) by {{user|Dave+B+Smith|Dave B Smith}}<br />Photographed in [[Barbados]], May 2008.]]
 
Used to be endemic to the [[Lesser Antilles]] but has now spread to the [[US Virgin Islands]] (part of the [[Puerto Rico]] bank) and is a vagrant to Puerto Rico. It is absent from the [[Grenadines]] but present on [[Grenada]].
 
Used to be endemic to the [[Lesser Antilles]] but has now spread to the [[US Virgin Islands]] (part of the [[Puerto Rico]] bank) and is a vagrant to Puerto Rico. It is absent from the [[Grenadines]] but present on [[Grenada]].
 
==Taxonomy==
 
==Taxonomy==

Revision as of 16:24, 3 November 2010

Male
Photo by Richard Fray
St. Lucia, February 2004
Loxigilla noctis

Includes Barbados Bullfinch

Identification

Female
Photo by NJLarsen
Savane Paille, Dominica, September 2008

Overall black to slate-gray color, interrupted by rufous on the throat, just in front of eye, and in most races on undertail coverts (undertail black in Martinique and St. Lucia). The female is a sandy gray-brown with rufous coloring to the wings and tail and greyish underparts. The head of the female is the same color as the mantle. Legs in both sexes are greyish to black, not pink.
Male has black bill in most areas, while female has lower mandible yellowish to pale horn; in Barbados, males are dusky horn both upper and lower mandible (and has plumage like female) while females show pale horn on lower mandible.

Similar species

In St. Lucia, the St. Lucia Black Finch is a species that could be mistaken for Lesser Antillean Bullfinch, however, the black finch has pink legs (more prominent in the male), a heavier beak, has a habit of bobbing its tail up and down, and are more often found low in dense vegetation. The male is entirely without rufous, while the female has gray on its head in contrast to brown back.

Distribution

Barbados Bullfinch (probably male) by Dave B Smith
Photographed in Barbados, May 2008.

Used to be endemic to the Lesser Antilles but has now spread to the US Virgin Islands (part of the Puerto Rico bank) and is a vagrant to Puerto Rico. It is absent from the Grenadines but present on Grenada.

Taxonomy

A reassignment of this and similar species to the tanagers have been proposed, but it is currently placed in the Emberizidae.

The Lesser Antillean Bullfinch is divided into eight subspecies. Clements and the AOU have split the Barbados form as Loxigilla barbadensis, Barbados Bullfinch, endemic to the island of Barbados. The basis for the split is that the Barbados birds have no male plumage type; just a drab brown plumage as females on the other islands.

Subspecies[1]

  • L. n. coryi:
  • L. n. ridgwayi:
  • L. n. desiradensis:
  • L. n. dominicana:
  • L. n. noctis:
  • L. n. sclateri:
  • L. n. crissalis:
  • L. n. grenadensis:
  • L. n. barbadensis = Barbados Bullfinch

Habitat

Dense and semi-open vegetation, often around houses.
Barbados Bullfinch is often seen in areas with high grass and is seen feeding on the seeds produced from such vegetation.

Behaviour

Often incredibly tame, well known for stealing nuts and sugar in outdoor restaurants.

References

  1. Clements, JF. 2008. The Clements Checklist of Birds of the World. 6th ed., with updates to December 2008. Ithaca: Cornell Univ. Press. ISBN 978-0801445019.
  2. Birdforum thread discussing Barbados Bullfinch

Recommended Citation

External Links


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