Neha Patil (Editor)

Golden winged grosbeak

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Passeriformes

Scientific name
  
Rhynchostruthus

Rank
  
Genus

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Fringillidae

Higher classification
  
Finch

Golden-winged grosbeak wwwhbwcomsitesdefaultfilesstyleslargeapub

Similar
  
Bird, Somali golden‑winged grosbeak, Oriole finch, São Tomé grosbeak, Finch

Arabian golden winged grosbeak


The genus Rhynchostruthus is a small group of finches in the family Fringillinae. Commonly known as golden-winged grosbeaks, they are attractive, chunky, medium-sized, robust-billed songbirds restricted to the southern Arabian and northern Somalian regions.

Contents

These elusive birds are typically found between 1,060 and 2,800 metres ASL in forested wadis and areas of scrub. The fruits of junipers, acacias and spurges appear to form the bulk of their diet.

Golden winged grosbeak song


Description

These birds have slight sexual dichromatism. Males are grey-brown overall with a black bill, dark mask, white cheeks, and large, bright yellow patches on the wings and tail. The extent of the dark head-pattern and white cheek-patches varies considerably between taxa. The females are similar to the males though somewhat duller, and the juveniles are rather streaky and lack the adults' distinctive head pattern.

Systematics

The large bill suggests a relationship with the Asian grosbeaks - e.g. Mycerobas - but its song and calls are reminiscent of European goldfinch Carduelis carduelis, European greenfinch C. chloris, and Yemen linnet C. yemenensis. Also it has been observed performing a greenfinch-like slow-winged display flight which suggests its true affinities may lie within the genus Carduelis. Altogether, Rhynchostruthus seems to belong to a group of Carduelinae which includes such birds as Carduelis, the oriole finch (Linurgus olivaceus), and the canaries, many of which have large amounts of brilliant yellow plumage. But the exact placement of the golden-winged grosbeaks is not very well resolved. Molecular genetic studies have shown that Rhynchostruthus and Rhodospiza form a distinct clade but are not closely related to any other of the birds commonly referred to as "grosbeaks".

The genus used to contain a single species, Rhynchostruthus socotranus. But more recently this is often split into three:

  • Socotra golden-winged grosbeak, Rhynchostruthus socotranus
  • Arabian golden-winged grosbeak, Rhynchostruthus percivali
  • Somali golden-winged grosbeak, Rhynchostruthus louisae
  • References

    Golden-winged grosbeak Wikipedia


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