THE BIRDS
PINE SISKIN. Spinus pinus pinus (Wilson)
Field charactersAbout
half size of Junco; size and general habits of a goldfinch. Sexes
practically alike. Tail deeply notched at end (fig. 53d). Whole
body plumage both above and below, streaked brown and dull white; middle
of wing and whole base of tail canary yellow, these areas of bright
color showing best as birds take flight. Flight undulating to marked
degree. Voice: A plaintive call note, swe-ah', with rising
inflection; also a throaty 'watch-winding' note, zwe-e-e-e-et or
zree-e-e-e-eet, the inflection rising and the intensity
increasing until the call is ended abruptly; in summer there is also a
goldfinch-like song.
Occurrence.Common in
spring, summer, and fall in Transition, Canadian, and Hudsonian zones
west of Sierran crest; recorded from Hazel Green eastward to Tioga Pass.
In winter small numbers are found in the Sonoran zones, as at Snelling.
Present in Yosemite Valley at least from April to December. Frequents
both coniferous and deciduous trees, and also often forages about
meadows on flower heads close to or on ground. Usually in
flocks.
In general characteristics the Pine Siskin is very
much like the goldfinches, but it does not wear so bright a pattern of
plumage, at least as regards the male sex. Indeed, its dully streaked
pattern recalls more the coloration of some kind of ground-dwelling
sparrow. Only by a yellow bar on the wing and by yellow at the base of
the tail (fig. 53d), which markings are partially concealed, does its
coloration suggest kinship with the more brilliantly marked birds.
In the forested region on the west slope of the
Sierra Nevada from Hazel Green, Chinquapin, and Yosemite Valley east to
the crest line of the mountains, Pine Siskins are relatively common from
early spring to late fall. Our earliest seasonal record for the species
in Yosemite Valley is for April 30 (1916) and the latest, made on the
margin of the Valley, at Fort Monroe, is for November 26 (1914). In
January a few were noted at Snelling. We saw none east of the Sierran
crest at any time nor were any observed in the Yosemite Valley or its
environs during the season of heavy snow. It remains to be determined
whether any of the siskin population stays in the higher altitudes
throughout the winter. The numbers which occur at the lower levels to
the west in that season are relatively small, and some of the birds may
go entirely out of the mountains, wintering still farther west or to the
southward.
The general behavior of Pine Siskins is much like
that of the goldfinches. The siskin is, perhaps, more persistently
flocking in habit. The flocks vary in size from a half-dozen to a
half-hundred or even more individuals. In flight each member of the band
rises and falls independently of its companions yet the flock formation
in this species is usually more compact than is that of the goldfinches.
The flight course of a flock is apt to be roundabout or circling, both
when the birds are leaving and arriving at a perch. Sometimes when
stirred up they will fly around in a wide circle several times and then
settle down again practically in the place whence they arose; and this
same repeated circling is apt to occur when they arrive from a distance
and are settling down preparatory to foraging in some particular
spot.
At times a flock of siskins will act as if greatly
perturbed, and fly about seemingly without definite purpose. The flock
will alight in one tree only to leave precipitately a few seconds later
and make off in a circling course to some other temporary resting place.
Such a performance is usually accompanied by frequent utterances of the
gasping 'watch-winding' note. When actively foraging, the individuals
perch every which way, some upside down like chickadees. Often a large
feeding flock will be perfectly quiet save for the patter of falling bud
scales or seed hulls.
The Pine Siskin subsists upon a somewhat different
class of food than its goldfinch relatives. Its usual diet comprises
tree buds of various kinds, material from seed cones and catkins of
alders and willows, and tender young needle tips from coniferous trees.
Some of the siskins seen at Fort Monroe on November 26, 1914, were
feeding on buds in the black oaks, while others were searching for seeds
in the little cones of the Douglas spruces. At Tuolumne Meadows on July
5, 1915, the birds were feeding in the terminal foliage of lodgepole
pines and an adult bird taken had its crop filled with needle buds of
that tree. A certain amount of the foraging of siskins is done on the
ground in openings between forest trees, or in meadows, where ripening
seeds of plants of the sunflower tribe are diligently sought after.
We obtained only one suggestion as to the nesting
activities of the Pine Siskin. At Tuolumne Meadows on July 6, 1915, a
young bird, not able to fly, was picked up from the ground. It had
evidently fallen from a nest somewhere in the lodgepole pines near
by.
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