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 Pine
Siskin
Pine Siskins are
approximately 5 inches (13 centimeters) in length. A
small streaky finch with a pale, thin, pointed bill, Pine
Siskins have dark wings and a tail that has a variable
amount of yellow.
The Pine Siskin is a highly social bird and can often be
found at feeders in large flocks or mixed with winter
flocks of American Goldfinches. The distinctive single-
or double-note flight call of the Pine Siskin is often
heard throughout North America in the fall.
Description: The head, throat, and nape
of Pine Siskins are buffy and finely streaked with dark
brown. They also have an indistinct dark brown eye
stripe. From the mantle to the rump, Pine Siskins are
buffy and broadly streaked with dark brown. The
underparts are whitish and finely streaked with dark
brown. The wings are primarily blackish in color, with
the median coverts having buffy edges; the base of the
outer primaries is broadly marked with yellow (on males)
and buff (on females). The black tail is notched, and the
outer tail feathers have yellow bases.
A single race of Pine Siskin, Carduelis pinus pinus,
breeds from southern Alaska through Canada to
Newfoundland, and south to northern New England.
Year-round, their range extends from Alaska through the
Rocky Mountains to northern Arizona.
Pine Siskins are irregularly common to abundant in their
breeding areasin other words, one year they might
be found in abundance at a particular location, whereas
the next year they are totally absent. They are also an
irregular migrant, occasionally staging massive
irruptions into the middle portions of North America,
which can extend as far south as central Florida. These
irruptions may be related to fluctuations in their food
supply, which consists of seeds and buds from conifers,
birches, and alders.
Pine Siskin
Range Map
Pine Siskins are the most frequently encountered member
of the irruptive winter finchesa group of finches
that breeds in the northern portions of North America and
periodically stages major winter invasions into central
latitudes of North America. These incursions may occur
for lack of food in their typical wintering areas.
Attracting
Finches
Visit Shaw Creek
Bird Supply to see our selection of Pine Siskin
Feeders.
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Bird Supply
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