Monk Parakeet / Chilean Flamingo / Green Jay / Oilbird / Hoatzin / Andean Flamingo / Andean Condor / Sharp-shinned Hawk / Scarlet Tanager / King Vulture / Western Wood Pewee / Blackburnian Warbler / Black-and-white Warbler / James's Flamingo / House Wren / Cerulean Warbler / Yellow-billed Cardinal / Giant Hummingbird / Rosybill / Little Tinamou / Rufous-tailed Jacamar / Channel-billed Toucan / Black-faced Antthrush / Blue-backed Manakin / Green-cheeked Parakeet / Horned Screamer / Scarlet Macaw / Blue-fronted Amazon / Violaceous Trogon / Ruby-topaz Hummingbird / Blue-gray Tanager / Black-throated Mango / Green-breasted Mango / White-tipped Dove / Grey-fronted Dove / Blue-and-yellow Macaw / Hyacinth Macaw / Red-winged Tinamou / Laughing Falcon / Turquoise Tanager / Green Honeycreeper / Purple Honeycreeper / White-necked Jacobin / White-tailed Trogon / Rufous-breasted Hermit / Blue-throated Macaw / Long-billed Gnatwren / Cocoa Thrush / White-necked Thrush / Golden-olive Woodpecker / More Birds of Bolivia. Rhea (bird) / Monk Parakeet / Chilean Flamingo / Sungrebe / Seriema / Black-necked Swan / Magellanic Plover / Andean Flamingo / Andean Condor / Yellow-billed Cuckoo / American Harpy Eagle / Southern Rockhopper Penguin / Sandwich Tern / Sharp-shinned Hawk / Swainson's Hawk / Coscoroba Swan / Franklin's Gull / American Purple Gallinule / King Vulture / James's Flamingo / Sedge Wren / House Wren / Yellow-billed Cardinal / King Penguin / Magellanic Penguin / Giant Hummingbird / Rosybill / Ruddy-headed Goose / Lesser Potoo / Rufous-tailed Jacamar / Green-cheeked Parakeet / Torrent Duck / Blue-fronted Amazon / Hornero / Kelp Goose / Flying Steamer Duck / White-headed Flightless Steamer Duck / Brazilian Duck / Crested Myna / Black-throated Mango / White-tipped Dove / Grey-fronted Dove / Yellow-bellied Elaenia / Red-winged Tinamou / Great Kiskadee / Laughing Falcon / Green-backed Firecrown / Green Kingfisher / White-necked Thrush / Golden-olive Woodpecker / More Birds of Argentina. Grassland Yellow-finch photo gallery VIREO Stamps (for Barbados) with South American RangeMap Grassland Yellow Finch videos, photos & sounds on the Internet Bird Collection ReferencesÄatabase entry includes justification for why this species is of least concernÄ«irds of Venezuela by Hilty, ISBN 0-7136-6418-5 External links Grassland Yellow Finches eat seeds and insects, and are usually seen in pairs or small groups. The call is a sharp te-tsip, and the males song, given from a perch or in a display flight, is a series of chips, buzzes and trills. Females have dark-streaked pale brown upperparts and dull yellow underparts. The crown and nape have dark streaking, and there is yellow around the eye. The males have bright yellow underparts and rump, and olive yellow upperparts. The Grassland Yellow Finch is about 12 cm long and weighs 13 g. The female lays 3 brown-speckled pale blue-green eggs in a grassy cup nest in tall grass, and several pairs may breed close to each other in suitable areas. The Grassland Yellow Finch, as its name implies, is found in fields and other open grassland. It was discovered on Trinidad in 2004, presumably having colonised from nearby Venezuela. Birds which breed further south in Argentina and Uruguay migrate to Bolivia and southern Brazil, (the cerrado etc.), in the austral winter. It is a resident breeding bird in tropical South America, from Colombia south and east to the Guianas and central Ecuador, Peru and Brazil. These were formerly united with the buntings and American sparrows in the Emberizidae, but are now known to be tanagers. Despite its name, it is not a finch, but is a seedeater. The Grassland Yellow Finch, Sicalis luteola, is a small passerine bird.
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