American
Goldfinch
(Carduelis
tristis)
The American Goldfinch is easily
detected in the spring or summer as a flash of
yellow, flying with an undulating motion and
calling perchicoree, perchicoree. With
its short, heavy, conical beak, the American Goldfinch is typical
of North American seed-eating birds that are
members of the finch (Fringillidae) family.
The goldfinch averages 4.25 inches in length,
much the same size as the English Sparrow. In spring
the birds molt all but their black wing and tail
feathers, and the bills of both sexes turn
orange. The male assumes brilliant canary yellow
plumage and a striking jet black cap. In flight,
a white rump contrasts with the black tail. The
summer female is olive yellow, with a bib of
yellow on her neck and breast.
After a complete molt in the fall, the birds grow
plumage that is almost identical in color for
both sexes. They are buff-colored below and olive
brown above. Their wings are black with white
wing bars and the black tail is etched with
white. The face and neck are a pale yellow only a
hint of the bright yellow of summer. The lesser
coverts (the feathers covering the shoulders) of
the male are yellow.
During their first autumn and winter the
juveniles are wood brown above with buffy, rather
than white, wing markings and dull black
shoulders, which distinguish them from the
adults.
American Goldfinch
Range Map
The
American Goldfinch breeds across southern
Canada
from British Columbia to
Newfoundland
and through most of the United States
north of the Gulf States. It prefers
trees in open places, especially in
orchards and along roadsides. As winter
approaches, the goldfinch moves short
distances towards the south. Its winter
range includes southern British Columbia,
Manitoba, Ontario, New
Brunswick, Nova Scotia,
and most of the United States. |
A
bird similar in appearance to the American
Goldfinch, the Lesser Goldfinch, is
occasionally seen in British Columbia. It is
slightly smaller than the American Goldfinch. In
summer the adult male is black or olive above,
rather than yellow, and he retains the black cap
all year. The female has an olive rump instead of
a pale rump. Both species feed their young on
regurgitated plant matter.
In the spring the start of courtship behavior is
signalled by one or more males chasing a single
female. The female flies in an elusive zigzagging
manner, and the male at times breaks into a slow
flat flight. During courtship, a pair will circle
about, with the male warbling throughout the
flight. Mating takes place in late summer, as
does nest building.
The male marks his domain by warbling and
flitting from perch to perch around the perimeter
of the territory. As well, he circles and
performs two flight displays. One is a low flat
flight. The other is an exaggerated version of
his normal undulating flight in which he tucks
his wings close to his body, plummets earthwards,
and then spreads his wings to coast upward in a
long series of loops.
Two or three pairs group their territories
together in a loose colony. This may aid in the
sharing of information about food and in defence
against predators. There is a greater density of
nests where food and water are in abundant
supply.
The female builds the nest in late summer up to
30 feet off the ground in the terminal branches
of a bush or tree. Nest building occurs in 10 to
40 minute spurts, during which material is
brought to the site and laid down. There may be
periods of hours or days when nothing is added.
The average interval between the start of the
nest and the laying of the first egg is eight
days.
The female strips fibers from dead trees, weeds,
and vines and utilizes catkins as well as grass
to construct the outer shell of the nest. She
sometimes dismantles the nests of other birds to
use the materials in her own nest. She reinforces
the rim of the nest with bark bound by sticky
spider silk and caterpillar webs. The nest is
lined with plant down from thistles, milkweed, and cattails.
The male often accompanies the female on flights
for nesting materials. He may carry some
materials back, but leaves the actual
construction of the nest to the female. He
perches nearby, singing and calling to his mate.
At the first sign of danger the male or female
will whistle sweet or call bearbee,
bearbee, bee, bearbee.
Why the American Goldfinch breeds so late in the
year (July-September) has puzzled many
scientists. The American Goldfinch is the only cardueline
finch to acquire its breeding plumage by molt. In
most finches, the feathers are gradually worn
down through use, resulting in a changed
appearance by the time the breeding season
arrives. Because the prolonged molt is unusual in
a bird of the temperate zone, it has been
suggested that a lengthy molting period may be
the only way a bird on a protein-poor seed diet
can fulfill the energy demands of breeding. Thus,
completion of molt rather than food availability
may determine the timing of breeding, although
the abundance of seeds in late summer may be
important in ensuring larger supplies of food for
the young than would be obtainable in May or
June.
The American Goldfinch lays four to six bluish
white eggs, roughly the size of peanuts. While
the female incubates the eggs she is fed by her
mate. With his esophagus full of seed, the male
flies over the nest, displaying and calling. The
hungry female responds by calling teeteeteeteete
softly and continuously. Sometimes the female
leaves the nest to receive the seed. At other
times, the male perches on the rim of the nest,
takes his mate's bill in his, and feeds her as if
she were a nestling.
At hatching, the young are covered in fluffy grey
down. Their eyes begin to open after three days.
In the first week of life the nestlings are
quiet, but by the second week they are active and
noisily seek out the food brought at long
intervals by their parents. A mass of undigested
seed bound together by mucus is regurgitated by
the adults into the mouths of the young.
Initially, the adults remove faecal sacs
deposited by the young, but later the young
defecate over the rim of the nest, leaving a
coating on the outer layer. The young birds grow
rapidly; by the time they leave the nest 11-15
days after hatching they are covered with the
beginning of the olive yellow juvenile plumage.
Shortly before fledging they develop a fledging
call that sounds like chick-kee or chick-wee.
The first young clambers out of the nest to a
nearby branch and tentatively tests its wings on
short flights. The others soon follow. The female
may begin construction of a new nest for a second
brood. The male is responsible for feeding the
young birds and finds his charges by listening
for the fledging call. Within a month's time, the
young are totally independent and no longer give
this call.
The American Goldfinch has a varied diet. Being
principally a seed-eater, the bird has an
abundant food supply for much of the year,
including seeds of thistle, dandelion, ragweed, mullein, cosmos, goatsbeard, sunflower, and alder.
Although some finches use their feet sparingly or
not at all to help in feeding, the American
Goldfinch uses its feet extensively. For example,
it will fly to a cluster of seed capsules at the
top of an evening primrose and cling
to the stalks in such a way that it can
delicately extract the seeds. In the spring the catkins hanging
from birches and alders are pulled up with the
beak and clamped down on the branch with the
toes. Such dexterity with the foot and bill,
combined with low body weight, enables the
American Goldfinch to take advantage of food
sources relatively inaccessible to some potential
competitors. The birds will also eat insects,
including plant lice and caterpillars, and will
root out larvae from galls and fruits.
Except during the nesting season, the American
Goldfinch is a sociable bird that seeks its own
kind to feed and fly with. In winter it mingles
with its relatives - the redpolls and siskins - feeding
in weedy fields and in orchards close to wooded
areas.
In its wintering range it is easy to attract the
American Goldfinch to a bird feeder. It
prefers hanging tubular feeders with places to
perch at each outlet. These feeders can be filled
with sunflower seeds or, better yet, the
commercially available thistle, or Niger, seed
imported from Africa. The birds
will also come to window trays and bird tables,
where they will eat sorghum, millet, canary seed,
cracked nutmeats, and sunflower seeds.
Before a storm the birds will feed in a frenzied
manner at feeders and show a significant gain in
weight before and during the storm. This behavior
may increase the American Goldfinch's chance of
survival under adverse conditions.
Attract
American Goldfinches with our Goldfinch
Feeders
|