ILLUSTRATION
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PHOTOS
CONSERVATION STATUS
The Eurasian Bullfinch is rated as Least Concern. This is a terrestrial bird species that is native to countries throughout Asia and Europe. The range of the Eurasian Bullfinch is large, estimated to reach up to 10 million square kilometers. The population of this bird species is believed to include as many as 28 million individual birds. At the current time, the population and range of the Eurasian Bullfinch are significant enough for no concern to be warranted regarding immediate danger. The prior rating for the Eurasian Bullfinch was Lower Risk, which was downgraded in 2000 to Least Concern.
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SUMMARY
Overview
Eurasian Bullfinch: Small finch, gray back and white rump. Cap is black and cheeks, breast, belly are red. Wings are black with single white bar. Black tail is slightly notched. Feeds on seeds and insects. Swift bounding flight, alternates rapid wing beats with wings pulled to sides.
Range and Habitat
Eurasian Bullfinch: Casual to accidental on the Aleutian, St Lawrence, and Nunivak Islands in the spring. Casual to accidental to coastal Alaska in the fall and winter. Preferred habitats include gardens, parks, hedges, agricultural areas, and scrub with scattered trees.
SONGS AND CALLS
Listen to Call
Eurasian Bullfinch
Voice Text
"feww, feww"
INTERESTING FACTS
- The Eurasian Bullfinch can inflict serious damage on orchards by feeding on the buds of fruit trees. This has been a serious problem, especially in south-east England, where orchards capable of yielding several tons of fruit have been stripped by bullfinches so efficiently that only a few pounds could be harvested.
- The sperm of the Eurasian Bullfinch differs markedly from that of all other passerines examined to date. In other passerines, the sperm head is pointed and helical, whereas in the Eurasian Bullfinch, the sperm head is rounded.
- Their population has declined substantially over much of Western Europe since about 1955, likely because of habitat loss through urbanization, deforestation, and the intensification of agricultural practices, including the loss of hedgerows.
- A group of bullfinches are collectively known as a "bellowing", "lowing", and "volery" of bullfinches.
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