Black-throated finch
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Family
Genus
SPECIES
Poephila cincta

The black-throated finch (Poephila cincta ), or parson finch, is a species of estrildid finch found in grassy woodlands throughout north-east Australia from Cape York Peninsula to central Queensland. The Southern black-throated finch (Poephila cincta cincta ) is endangered, with a population in decline and its habitat is threatened by development, and has become extinct in New South Wales, while the Northern black-throated finch (Poephila cincta atropygialis ) is not listed as threatened at this point.

Appearance

Measuring around 10 cm (4 in) in length, the black-throated finch has a short black bill, lores, and throat, sharply delineated from the rest of the pale grey head. The wings, breast and belly are pale pinkish brown, and the short tail is black, while the rump is black in northern forms and white in southern.

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The vocalisation of P. cincta is comparable to that of the sister species Poephila acuticauda, although lower in tone and slightly less simple in the harmonic structures. Up to twelve calls have been identified, and the structure and tone of these is also distinguishable by subspecies.

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Distribution

Geography

Countries
Biogeographical realms

The black-throated finch was traditionally found from Cape York south through eastern Queensland and into north-eastern New South Wales in the vicinity of Tenterfield, however it has not been recorded in New South Wales since 1994. It is sedentary or locally nomadic. It is found in grassy open forested habitats, generally near bodies of water, such as rivers.

Black-throated finch habitat map
Black-throated finch habitat map
Black-throated finch
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Habits and Lifestyle

The black-throated finch is found in flocks of up to 30 birds. The behaviour is similar to that of the longtail Poephila acuticauda, close pair bonds that are isolated or associating in loose groups of six or more pairs. They forage in a range that centres on the nest site, which is used for breeding or for roosting outside of the maternity season.Local and seasonal conditions may cause to pairs to join congregations at limited resources, food and especially water, and they may join large flocks to travel to water sources during drought.

Lifestyle
Seasonal behavior
Bird's call

Diet and Nutrition

The black-throated finch primarily eats seed from various species of grass, and also eats spiders and ants. They forage at the ground for fallen seeds of native plants, their primary diet, and select these ones after the other. As with some other estrildids, they have also been observed harvesting seed still attached to the plant. They may also occasionally bend the stem down, perhaps clasping it against the ground with their foot, to reach and select seeds from the seed-heads.Larger flocks may form to feed at recently burnt sites.The species also hunt termites who are flying during the breeding season, capturing them as they trail along the ground or when they are in flight; the immature finches eventually learns to shake the wings off before consumption.Spiders are plucked from their webs for an occasional supplement to their staple diet.

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They are able to suck water by partially opening and immersing their bill, drinking in the morning or evening unless the water is readily available.

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Mating Habits

Breeding may occur from September to January in the southern parts of its range, and after the monsoon season in February onwards in the north. One or two broods are laid during this time. The nest is a round structure woven from dried grasses with tube-like entrance placed high in a eucalypt 5 metres above the ground. Four to six matte white oval eggs are laid, measuring 12 x 17 mm.

Population

Population number

For the past few decades, the population of this species has declined. While the northern subspecies (black-rumped, Poephila cincta atropygialis ) has a status of "Least concern" under Queensland's Nature Conservation Act 1992, the Commonwealth status of the southern subspecies (Poephila cincta cincta ) under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation Act 1999 is "Endangered". The reason for the decline in population is probably due to the spread of pastoralism, changes in fire regime, and increases in the density of native woody weeds in grassy savannahs.

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A national management plan was published in 2004 by the New South Wales and Queensland governments, but records of the population density in the southern areas of its range showed declines in observed numbers from moderately common or abundant, to assessments as locally extinct or very rare by 2012.

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References

1. Black-throated finch Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black-throated_finch
2. Black-throated finch on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/22719692/94639584
3. Xeno-canto bird call - https://xeno-canto.org/439565

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