Online Encyclopedia

GOLDFINCH (Ger. Gold fink')

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 211 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

GOLDFINCH (Ger. Gold fink')  , the Fringilla carduelis of
See also:
Linnaeus and the Carduelis
See also:
ale gaits of later authors, an extremely well-known
See also:
bird found over the greater parts of
See also:
Europe and North Africa, and eastwards to
See also:
Persia and Turkestan . Its gay plumage is matched by its sprightly nature; and together they make it one of the most favourite cage-birds among all classes . As a songster it is indeed surpassed by many other
See also:
species, but its docility and ready
See also:
attachment to its master or
See also:
mistress make up for any defect in its vocal powers . In some parts of England the trade in goldfinches is very considerable . In 186o Mr Hussey reported (Zool., p . 7144) the
See also:
average
See also:
annual captures near
See also:
Worthing to exceed 11,000 dozens—nearly all being cock-birds; and a witness before a committee of the House of
See also:
Commons in 1873 stated that, when a boy, he could take
See also:
forty ' The more
See also:
common German name, however, is Distelfink (
See also:
Thistle-Finch) or Stieglitz . dozens in a
See also:
morning near
See also:
Brighton . In these districts and others the number has become much reduced, owing doubtless in
See also:
part to the fatal practice of catching the birds just before or during the breeding-season; but perhaps the strongest cause of their growing scarcity is the constant breaking-up of waste lands, and the extirpation of weeds (particularly of the order
See also:
Compositae) essential to the improved
See also:
system of agriculture; for in many parts of Scotland, East
See also:
Lothian for instance, where goldfinches were once as plentiful as sparrows, they are now only rare stragglers, and yet there they have not been thinned by netting . Though goldfinches may occasionally be observed in the coldest weather, incomparably the largest number leave Britain in autumn, returning in spring, and resorting to gardens and orchards to breed, when the lively
See also:
song of the cock, and the bright yellow wings of both sexes, quickly attract
See also:
notice . The
See also:
nest is a beautifully neat structure, often placed at no
See also:
great height from the ground, but generally so well hidden by the leafy bough on which it is built as not to be easily found, until, the young being hatched, the constant visits of the parents reveal its site . When the broods leave the nest they move into the more open country, and frequenting pastures, commons, heaths and
See also:
downs, assemble in large flocks towards the end of summer . Eastward of the range of the
See also:
present species its place is taken by its congener C. caniceps, which is easily recognized .by wanting the black hood and white ear-coverts of the
See also:
British bird .

Its

home seems to be in Central
See also:
Asia, but it moves southward in winter, being common at that season in Cashmere, and is not unfrequently brought for sale to
See also:
Calcutta . The position of the genus Carduelis in the
See also:
family Fringillidae is not very clear . Structurally it would seem to have some relation to the siskins (Chrysomitris), though the members of the two groups have very different habits, and perhaps its nearest kinship lies with the hawfinches (Coccothraustes) . See FINCH . (A .

End of Article: GOLDFINCH (Ger. Gold fink')
[back]
GOLDFIELD
[next]
GOLDFISH (Cyprinus or Carassius auratus)

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.