Data for:
Female © Ramiro Ramirez
Male © samuel olivieri bornand
Juvenile © Marco Fidalgo
© Julien Birard

Black-capped Warbling Finch Microspingus melanoleucus

Sign in to see your badges

Identification

POWERED BY MERLIN

Striking, plump finch-like species with a black hood, gray above and white below. Found in dry forests and wooded savannas, where it forages in dense shrubby areas, typically in small flocks. The song is a chirping “twasut tsee twaas.”

POWERED BY MERLIN

Statistics

Sign in to see your stats

Weekly Bar Chart

JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMayJuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctoberNovemberDecember
Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0.9 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 2.9 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 1.6 Week Frequency: 1.3 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 1.6 Week Frequency: 4.0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 6.3 Week Frequency: 9.1 Week Frequency: 5.0 Week Frequency: 9.1 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 3.0 Week Frequency: 2.6 Week Frequency: 6.3 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 3.2 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 1.9 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0.1 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 3.8
Weekly Bar Chart

Range Map

Media

Top photos

San José, Uruguay

Top audio

San José, Uruguay

Top video

San José, Uruguay