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Common rosefinch
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| Common rosefinch | |
|---|---|
| Male in Russia | |
| Female at Baur reservoir in Uttarakhand, India | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Chordata |
| Class: | Aves |
| Order: | Passeriformes |
| Family: | Fringillidae |
| Subfamily: | Carduelinae |
| Genus: | Carpodacus |
| Species: | C. erythrinus
|
| Binomial name | |
| Carpodacus erythrinus (Pallas, 1770)
| |
| Range of C. erythrinus Breeding Non-breeding
| |
| Synonyms | |
|
Erythrina erythrina | |
The common rosefinch (Carpodacus erythrinus) or scarlet rosefinch is the most widespread and common rosefinch of Asia and Europe.
Taxonomy
[edit]In a molecular phylogenetic study of the finch family published in 2012, Zuccon and colleagues found that the common rosefinch fell outside the core Carpodacus rosefinch clade and was a sister to the scarlet finch (at the time Haematospiza sipahi). They recommended that the common rosefinch should be moved to a new monotypic genus with the resurrected name of Erythrina.[2] The British Ornithologists' Union accepted this proposal,[3] but the International Ornithological Union chose instead to adopt a more inclusive Carpodacus that retained the common rosefinch in the rosefinch genus.[4]
The genus name is from Ancient Greek karpos, "fruit" and dakno, "to bite", and the specific erythrinus is from Latin erythros, "red".[5]
Description
[edit]The common rosefinch is 13–15 cm (5.1–5.9 in) in length.[6] It has a stout and conical bill. The mature male has brilliant rosy-carmine head, breast and rump; heavy bill; dark brown wings with two indistinct bars, and a white belly. Females and young males are dull-colored with yellowish-brown above, brighter on the rump and greyer on head; buff below.
Adults moult in their winter quarters, between September and November. After moulting the red of male is subdued, and becomes brighter during the winter due to wear of the feathers.[7]
A rare form exists, in which the red colouring of males is replaced by yellow. The cause is environmental, rather than genetic, being affected by diet and the presence of parasites.[8]
Distribution and habitat
[edit]It has spread westward through Europe; in recent decades, it has been observed in Portugal,[9] and has occurred in the British Isles as a rare visitor, with some breeding records in recent years.[10] Common rosefinches breed from the Danube valley, Sweden, and Siberia to the Bering Sea; the Caucasus, northern Iran and Afghanistan, the western Himalayas, Tibet and China; to Japan between latitudes 25° and 68°. In winter they are found from southern Iran to south-east China, India, Burma, and Indochina. It occurs as a vagrant in Sri Lanka.
They are found in summer in thickets, woodland and forest edges near rivers and in winter in gardens and orchards, wetlands and locally in dry oak woods.[citation needed]
Behaviour
[edit]
The nest is placed low in a bush. The eggs are dark blue with coarse dark brown spots, and a typical clutch contains five eggs.[citation needed]
References
[edit]- ^ BirdLife International (2017). "Carpodacus erythrinus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017 e.T22720556A111130806. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-1.RLTS.T22720556A111130806.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
- ^ Zuccon, Dario; Prŷs-Jones, Robert; Rasmussen, Pamela C.; Ericson, Per G.P. (2012). "The phylogenetic relationships and generic limits of finches (Fringillidae)" (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 62 (2): 581–596. Bibcode:2012MolPE..62..581Z. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2011.10.002. PMID 22023825.
- ^ Sangster, George; Collinson, J. Martin; Crochet, Pierre-André; Knox, Alan G.; Parkin, David T.; Votier, Stephen C. (2013). "Taxonomic recommendations for Western Palearctic birds: ninth report". Ibis. 155 (4): 898–907. doi:10.1111/ibi.12091.
- ^ Gill, Frank; Donsker, David (eds.). "Finches, euphonias". World Bird List Version 5.2. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 5 June 2015.
- ^ Jobling, James A. (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London, United Kingdom: Christopher Helm. pp. 92, 149. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
- ^ Clement, P.; Christie, D.A. (2014). "Common Rosefinch (Carpodacus erythrinus)". In del Hoyo, J.; Elliott, A.; Sargatal, Sargatal; Christie, D.A.; de Juana, E. (eds.). Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive. Barcelona, Spain: Lynx Edicions. doi:10.2173/bow.comros.01. S2CID 226003706. Retrieved 12 July 2015.(subscription required)
- ^ RSPB Hansbook of British Birds (2014). UK ISBN 978-1-4729-0647-2
- ^ Harrop, Andrew H. J. (December 2023). "Yellow Common Rosefinches". British Birds. 116 (12): 732–734.
- ^ "Pintarroxo-vermelho: Carpodacus erythrinus". avesdeportugal.info. Retrieved 13 November 2020.
- ^ "Common Rosefinch Bird Facts | Carpodacus Erythrinus". Royal Society for the Protection of Birds. Retrieved 2025-02-17.
External links
[edit]- Oiseaux Photos
- OBC 39 photographs (see pulldown menu at page bottom)
- Avibase[permanent dead link]
Common rosefinch
View on GrokipediaTaxonomy
Etymology
The scientific name of the common rosefinch, Carpodacus erythrinus, originates from Greek and Latin roots that reflect its physical characteristics and feeding behavior. The genus name Carpodacus was introduced by German naturalist Johann Jakob Kaup in 1829 and derives from the Greek words karpos (fruit) and dakos (biter), alluding to the seed- and fruit-eating habits typical of rosefinches.[7] The species epithet erythrinus stems from the Greek eruthros (red), describing the striking rosy-red plumage of the adult male.[7] The bird was first described scientifically by German-Russian naturalist Peter Simon Pallas in 1770, who placed it in the genus Loxia as Loxia erythrina in his work Novi Commentarii Academiae Scientiarum Imperialis Petropolitanae, based on specimens from eastern Asia.[8] It was later reclassified into Carpodacus as understanding of finch relationships evolved, reflecting its placement within the Fringillidae family.[9] The common English name "rosefinch" combines "rose," referring to the male's pinkish-red coloration reminiscent of rose hues, with "finch," denoting its membership in the finch family.[10] This nomenclature highlights the bird's distinctive appearance while aligning it taxonomically with related seed-eating species.Classification
The common rosefinch belongs to the family Fringillidae, known as the true finches, and is placed within the subfamily Carduelinae, which encompasses the rosefinches and related groups. Its binomial name is Carpodacus erythrinus, originally described by Peter Simon Pallas in 1770 based on specimens from eastern Russia. A molecular phylogenetic analysis published in 2012 revealed that the common rosefinch is not part of the core Carpodacus clade but instead forms a basal lineage sister to the scarlet finch (Haematospiza sipahi) and the fire-finches (Lagonosticta spp.), prompting the proposal of a monotypic genus Erythrina for it. This revision was adopted by the British Ornithologists' Union in 2013, recognizing Erythrina erythrina as the valid nomenclature for Western Palearctic populations.[11] In contrast, the International Ornithological Congress has retained the species in Carpodacus, reflecting ongoing taxonomic debate within the rosefinch complex.[12] Within the evolutionary history of rosefinches, the common rosefinch stands out as the most widespread species across Eurasia, with the group as a whole originating in southwest China and the Himalayan region approximately 14 million years ago during the Miocene.[13] This basal position underscores its distinct phylogenetic relationships compared to more derived Asian rosefinch species, highlighting convergent plumage evolution in the subfamily.Subspecies
The common rosefinch (Carpodacus erythrinus) is recognized as comprising five subspecies, reflecting its broad Palearctic distribution.[3] The nominate subspecies, C. e. erythrinus, breeds across northern, central, and eastern Europe to western and central Siberia and northwest Mongolia, wintering from northern India to northwest Thailand. C. e. grebnitskii occupies eastern Siberia, northern Mongolia, and northeast China including Korea, with non-breeding ranges extending to southeast China and northern Vietnam. C. e. kubanensis is restricted to northern and eastern Turkey, the Caucasus region, and northern and northeastern Iran, wintering in northern India. C. e. ferghanensis breeds in eastern and southeastern Kazakhstan to western China, Afghanistan, and the northwest Himalayas, migrating to northwest India in winter. C. e. roseatus is found in the central and eastern Himalayas to northeast India, the Tibetan Plateau, and central and southern China, wintering across India to southeast China.[3] These subspecies show variations in plumage intensity and the extent of red pigmentation, alongside subtle differences in body size that generally increase from western to eastern populations. For example, males of the nominate C. e. erythrinus exhibit pinkish-red to deep red on the head, breast, and rump, while C. e. grebnitskii has darker carmine-red upperparts with pinkish-red underparts; C. e. roseatus displays brighter carmine-red extending more extensively to the breast and belly, and C. e. kubanensis features deeper red on the head and breast with paler flanks. Females follow similar patterns, with eastern forms like C. e. grebnitskii and C. e. roseatus appearing darker and more heavily streaked overall.[2] The validity of these subspecies has been debated through genetic analyses. A 2005 mitochondrial DNA study identified three incompletely isolated genetic groups—corresponding to southwestern (kubanensis), northeastern (grebnitskii), and northwestern (erythrinus and ferghanensis) forms—but found no reciprocal monophyly and restricted gene flow, indicating recent divergence that questions traditional boundaries.[14] In contrast, a 2012 phylogeographic analysis using mtDNA and Z-linked markers supported three allopatric groups with no intergroup gene flow, aligning with the named subspecies and suggesting an early stage of speciation without significant niche divergence.[15]Description
Size and structure
The common rosefinch measures 13–15 cm in body length, with a wingspan of 22–26 cm and a weight ranging from 17–30 g.[16][17][3] This places it among medium-sized finches, comparable in overall dimensions to a house sparrow but with a notably dumpy, compact build.[18] Its bill is stout and conical, a structural adaptation well-suited for cracking open seeds, the bird's primary food source.[3] The tail is notched, and the legs are of medium length, supporting its terrestrial foraging habits.[3] Sexual dimorphism is evident in size, with adult males typically larger than females, particularly in wing length and overall body mass.[19]Plumage
The adult male common rosefinch in breeding plumage features a striking rosy-carmine coloration on the head, breast, and rump, contrasting with grayish-brown wings and back that display two prominent white wingbars, with a whitish belly, sometimes washed with red.[20] This vivid red pigmentation, derived from dietary carotenoids, intensifies during the breeding season to serve as a visual signal.[20] In contrast, the female and juvenile plumages are more subdued, presenting a dull yellowish-brown overall tone streaked with darker brown markings, entirely lacking the red tones seen in adult males.[20] Juveniles exhibit finer streaking on the forehead, crown, and breast, with a buff-brown tinge on the head and face, aiding in camouflage among foliage.[20] Adults undergo a complete post-breeding molt between September and November, during which the male's red plumage fades to a duller, more subdued brownish-pink tone with retained but less intense red on the head and breast.[20] This non-breeding plumage brightens progressively through the winter, regaining vibrancy by pre-breeding in spring due to feather wear and carotenoid deposition.[20] A rare yellow morph occurs in some males, where the typical red is replaced by bright yellow, likely resulting from dietary carotenoid limitations or parasitic influences that disrupt normal pigmentation processes.[21] Subspecies exhibit minor variations in the intensity and extent of red coloration across their ranges.[2]Distribution and habitat
Breeding distribution
The common rosefinch (Carpodacus erythrinus) has a broad breeding range across the Palearctic region, extending from the Danube valley and northwestern Balkans in Europe eastward through central and eastern Europe, Siberia, and the Russian Far East to Kamchatka, Sakhalin, the Kuril Islands, and Japan.[3] This distribution spans latitudes from approximately 25°N in the southern Himalayas and central China to 68°N in Scandinavia and northern Siberia, primarily within boreal and temperate climatic zones.[22] Core breeding populations are concentrated in Siberia, with significant numbers also in Scandinavia (particularly Finland and Sweden) and Central Asia (including Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Mongolia), where the species occupies diverse forested and scrubby landscapes during the breeding season.[5] In Europe, the estimated breeding population is 3,410,000–6,990,000 pairs, representing about 25% of the global total, with the largest concentrations in Russia, Latvia, and Finland.[5] Subspecies distributions further delineate this range: C. e. erythrinus breeds in northern, central, and eastern Europe to central Siberia; C. e. grebnitskii in eastern Siberia, northern Mongolia, and northeastern China; C. e. kubanensis in Turkey, the Caucasus, and northern Iran; C. e. ferghanensis in eastern Kazakhstan to western China, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and the northwestern Himalayas; and C. e. roseatus in the central and eastern Himalayas to central and southern China.[3] Over the past century, the species has undergone a notable westward expansion in Europe, colonizing new areas in central and northern regions, with vagrants reaching as far west as Portugal and the Canary Islands.[23] In the British Isles, breeding was first confirmed in Scotland in 1982, with subsequent irregular records indicating possible nesting at around 25 sites, mostly in Scotland, though attempts remain rare and sporadic.[6] Breeding occurs from lowlands to montane elevations, reaching up to 4,550 m in the Himalayas, Tibetan Plateau, and Central Asian mountains, where the species favors shrubby thickets and woodland edges in moist forests.[5] The overall extent of occurrence for breeding is approximately 41,700,000 km², underscoring the species' adaptability to varied geographic and elevational gradients across Eurasia.[5]Non-breeding distribution
During the non-breeding season, the common rosefinch (Carpodacus erythrinus) primarily occupies wintering grounds extending from southern Iran and the Middle East southward through Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, and Myanmar to Indochina—including Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam—and southern China.[5][24] These areas encompass a range of lowland and foothill habitats where the bird seeks milder conditions during the northern winter months. Certain southern populations exhibit partial migratoriness or sedentariness, particularly in milder regions such as Turkey, leading to overlap between breeding and non-breeding ranges in these locales.[5] This behavior allows some individuals to remain year-round in suitable southern environments without undertaking long-distance migration. The species is a notable vagrant outside its typical non-breeding range, appearing regularly as an autumn visitor in western Europe, especially in the Northern Isles of the United Kingdom like Shetland, where birds often linger for weeks.[6] It is also recorded as a rare vagrant in North America, with sightings concentrated in Alaska, the Aleutian Islands, and the Bering Sea region.[5][25]Preferred habitats
The common rosefinch prefers dense thickets and woodland edges during the breeding season, often selecting areas with abundant shrub cover such as willows (Salix), alders (Alnus), and poplars (Populus) for nesting and territorial singing.[5] These habitats commonly include riverine shrubs and reedbeds near watercourses, as well as marsh edges and forest clearings in moist, lowland to montane environments.[18] In taiga forests, it favors zones with berry-producing understory plants like dwarf willows and junipers, which provide suitable structure up to the tree line.[5] Studies on singing males confirm a strong preference for wet willow shrubs, bushes along rivers and canals, and alder-dominated wetlands over open or anthropogenic areas.[26] In winter, the species shifts to more open and varied low-elevation habitats, including gardens, wetlands, and agricultural areas such as arable land and plantations, where seed sources are accessible.[5] It frequently occupies urban parks and shrublands near permanent rivers or streams, utilizing reedbeds and cultivation edges in subtropical or temperate settings.[5] These non-breeding preferences emphasize moist, vegetated patches that offer cover and proximity to water.[18] The common rosefinch demonstrates notable adaptability to human-modified landscapes, readily breeding and wintering in orchards, hedgerows, and even city centers with suitable shrubby vegetation.[5] This flexibility allows it to exploit edges of agricultural fields and cherry groves, integrating into altered environments without strict dependence on pristine forests.[5]Behavior
Foraging and diet
The common rosefinch is primarily granivorous, with its diet consisting mainly of seeds from trees such as birch (Betula), alder (Alnus), spruce (Picea), larch (Larix), pine (Pinus), willow (Salix), aspen (Populus), and oak (Quercus), as well as berries from plants like juniper (Juniperus), rowan (Sorbus aucuparia), cotoneaster (Cotoneaster), and sea-buckthorn (Hippophae).[3] It also consumes buds, catkins, shoots, leaves, fruits, and nectar from various plants, reflecting its adaptation to forested and shrubby habitats where these resources are abundant.[5] During the breeding season, the common rosefinch supplements its plant-based diet with insects, larvae, and other invertebrates to obtain essential proteins, particularly for provisioning nestlings.[5] This shift enhances nutritional intake for reproduction, though the core diet remains seed-dominated year-round.[3] Foraging typically occurs on the ground, in low vegetation such as grasses and bushes, or at various heights in trees when targeting buds and fruits; birds often forage singly, in pairs, small groups, or larger flocks outside the breeding period.[3] The species uses its stout, conical bill to crack and husk seeds efficiently, a common adaptation among finches that allows extraction of the nutrient-rich kernel.[27]Reproduction
The common rosefinch is primarily monogamous, forming pairs that typically last for a single breeding season, though occasional polygamy has been observed in areas with an excess of immature males.[3][5] Breeding occurs from May to August in northern populations, with one brood per season.[3][5] The female alone constructs the nest, a loose cup-shaped structure placed low in bushes, junipers, spruces, or willows, typically 1-2 m above the ground and often concealed in foliage or against a trunk.[5][1] It is built from twigs, plant stems, grass, flowerheads, moss, lichens, and plant down, lined with animal hair, root fibers, and feathers.[5][1] The female lays 4-6 pale bluish-green eggs marked with darker spots.[5][2] Incubation is performed solely by the female and lasts 11-13 days.[1] After hatching, both parents feed the altricial young, which fledge 10-15 days later; nestlings receive insect supplementation to meet their protein needs.[1][28] Individuals reach sexual maturity at one year of age.[29]Vocalizations
The male common rosefinch delivers a melodious, whistled song typically consisting of 3 notes or short phrases of 4–7 syllables, lasting about 1–2 seconds, often described as a swift mix of slow whistles and quicker elements resembling "plea-sure" or warbling sequences with a complex middle section and lingering high notes.[18][30][31] These songs are sung from an exposed perch primarily during the breeding season to attract mates and defend territory, with geographic dialects evident in longer variants that encode local identity.[31] The species' calls include a sharp "pyit" or "tik" note used for alarm and a twittering "ti-ti-ti" series employed in flight or for contact between individuals.[30] These calls form a species-specific acoustic image structured in four syllables with individual variations.[32] Vocalizations differ by sex and season, with adult males producing the full repertoire of songs while females and first-year males are quieter, relying more on calls and occasionally subdued songs during breeding activities.[31][33] The song plays a key role in breeding displays, where males use it to court females.[6]Migration
The common rosefinch (Carpodacus erythrinus) is generally a full migrant, though partially migratory with northern populations undertaking full long-distance migrations while southern populations are largely resident or perform shorter altitudinal movements.[5][3] Northern breeding populations, spanning from Europe through Siberia, depart their breeding grounds in late July to early August and arrive at southern wintering sites by October after a journey lasting 9–13 weeks and covering 5,800–6,800 km.[34] In contrast, spring migration northward begins in mid-April and is swifter, completing in 4–5 weeks over 6,200–6,700 km, with birds returning to breeding areas by May.[34][35] These movements connect northern Eurasian breeding distributions to non-breeding ranges in southern Asia, such as northern India and Pakistan.[20] Migration routes follow a loop pattern, with autumn paths trending eastward and more northerly through Central Asia—traversing features like the Tien Shan, Pamir, and Hindu Kush mountains—before reaching wintering grounds in South Asia.[34] Spring returns take more southerly trajectories via northern India and Central Asian corridors back to Europe and Siberia, potentially to minimize overland flight across arid zones.[34] Navigation likely relies on visual landmarks such as mountain ranges to guide these paths, alongside innate orientation mechanisms suited to medium-distance travel.[34][36] During migration, common rosefinches travel primarily at night, though diurnal flights occur during spring passage; they move singly, in small family groups of same-age birds, or occasionally in larger flocks of up to 200 individuals.[20] Irruptive movements are observed in wintering areas, where birds relocate 300–850 km between sites in response to local food scarcity, extending autumn stopovers for 19–28 days to exploit temporary resource abundance in Central Asia.[34]Conservation
Population status
The common rosefinch (Carpodacus erythrinus) is classified as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List, indicating that it does not qualify for a more threatened category due to its large range and population size.[5] Globally, the population is estimated at 27.3–56 million mature individuals as of 2018, with the majority occurring in Asia where the species is widespread and abundant across its breeding range from Siberia to Japan.[5] In Europe, the breeding population is smaller but substantial, estimated at 3.41–6.99 million pairs as of 2021, equivalent to approximately 6.83–14 million mature individuals, primarily concentrated in Russia which accounts for about 86% of the European total. The species is classified as Near Threatened on the European Red List of Birds (2021) due to population reductions observed over recent generations.[37][5][38] Although the overall global population trend is decreasing, the rate is slow (less than 10% over three generations) and insufficient to trigger conservation concern.[5] In Europe, monitoring data reveal mixed trends: long-term declines in northern countries like Finland (-47% to -65% since 1980) are offset by increases in central and southern regions such as Romania (+2000% to 3000%) and Austria (+15% to 30%), reflecting historical range expansions during the 20th century that have contributed to overall stability.[37] Short-term trends (2007–2018) show similar variability, with no continent-wide significant declines reported by BirdLife International.[37]Threats and conservation measures
The common rosefinch faces minor threats from habitat loss in its breeding thickets, primarily due to deforestation and conversion of natural areas to agricultural land, which reduces available shrubland and woodland edges. In wintering grounds, populations may experience increased competition for food resources in urban gardens and orchards, exacerbated by habitat fragmentation and changing land use practices. Additionally, rare impacts from pesticide application affect insect availability, a key component of the breeding diet for adults and nestlings. Climate change is increasingly implicated in regional declines, such as a 60–85% reduction in the Czech Republic population since the 1990s.[5][39][40][41] Given its abundant and stable global population, classified as Least Concern by the IUCN, the species requires no major targeted conservation programs. It is protected under the EU Birds Directive, which safeguards wild bird populations across member states through habitat protection and hunting regulations, as well as the Bern Convention Appendix II for European and Central Asian range.[42][43] Ongoing monitoring efforts focus on vagrant populations in western Europe and potential range shifts driven by climate change, with systematic breeding bird surveys in countries like Finland, Sweden, and the Czech Republic tracking trends and informing adaptive management. These initiatives help detect localized declines and assess impacts from warming temperatures on migration and breeding success.[5][41]References
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/rosefinch