Don't want to see ads? Sign up...




Species icon
Grey-hooded Sierra Finch

Phrygilus gayi
(Gervais, FLP, 1834)
Comesebo Andino

Family: Thraupidae
Order: Passeriformes
Class: Aves
Phylum / Division: Chordata
Kingdom: Animalia

 Request change
Filters


Conservation status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Synonyms: Fringilla gayi.

Subspecies:


Description: Sierra finch measuring 15–17 cm, variable according to region and subspecies. The male shows a bluish-gray hood, olive or olive-ochraceous back, yellowish chest, and an extensive white belly and undertail. Wings are blackish with slate-gray coverts. The female is duller, with a white, finely streaked throat, olive back, less-defined gray hood, and yellowish underparts with a whitish center. The bill is bicolored with a dark culmen. Juveniles are paler, with more marked eyebrow and malar lines and cinnamon wing bars.
Similar species: • Black-hooded Sierra Finch (P. atriceps): male unmistakable due to its black hood and wings; females are more tawny and show less white on the belly. • Patagonian Sierra Finch (P. patagonicus): major source of confusion in the south; males have a rusty-ochre back and less white on the belly; females are yellower and have a less-streaked throat. Generally closer to forested habitats. • Hooded Siskin (Rauenia bonariensis): males are more golden with dark lores and a bluish hood, and lack a white belly. Common in lower elevations.

Subspecies: gayi (northern and central Andes): Found in Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, Catamarca, La Rioja, and San Juan. Male with bluish-gray hood and olive-ochre back. Female grayish-olive with streaked throat. caniceps (Patagonia): Found in Neuquén, Río Negro, Chubut, Santa Cruz, and Tierra del Fuego. Male similar but generally larger, slightly less yellow on the chest, and with more extensive white on the belly. Female with more marked facial pattern. Sympatric with the Patagonian Sierra Finch.

Geographical distribution: Almost restricted to Argentina and Chile. Broad distribution in Argentina, from Jujuy to Tierra del Fuego, inhabiting Andean foothills, shrubby ravines, high Andean steppes, Monte shrublands, and Patagonian steppe. In the north it is always found at high elevations; in the south it also occurs in lowlands and open steppe. Shows altitudinal migration in the northwest and slight latitudinal movements in Patagonia. Elevational range 0–3500 m, reaching over 4,000 m in the northwest. In the north it undergoes altitudinal movements, descending to lower ravines in winter. In southern Patagonia individuals move north and east during the non-breeding season.

Habitat: Dry ravine shrublands, shrub steppe, Monte scrub, Patagonian grasslands, edges of low forests, rocky ground, and open areas with stones and cacti. In winter it may use more wooded or urbanized areas.

Behavior: Very confiding. Moves in pairs or small groups, joining mixed flocks in winter. Makes short flights and often perches on rocks, walls, or fences. Its song is a series of metallic, brief, melodic notes. Sings from rocks, shrubs, and posts.

Diet: Mainly seeds, shoots, and arthropods. Complements diet with fruits and nectar. Highly adapted to human environments, where it feeds on crumbs and scraps. Forages on rocky ground and among shrubs, and in winter also in trees.

Breeding: Cup-shaped nest in dense shrubs, rocks, or human structures, built with grasses, roots, stems, and lined with wool and hair. Usual clutch of 2–4 pale green eggs with fine speckles.

Conservation status: Species not considered threatened. Common and widely distributed.


Authors of this compilation: Diego Carus and Maria Belén Dri – 06/12/2025




Loading map...




Last published photographs

Foto
Photography ID: 625819
  Adult

Cortaderas
Catamarca
Argentina
03/01/2025
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 532139
  Adult

Reserva Natural Villavicencio
Mendoza
Argentina
04/15/2023
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 426661
  Adult

Parque Provincial Aconcagua
Mendoza
Argentina
12/26/2020
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 393641
  Adult

Puerto Deseado
Santa Cruz
Argentina
03/16/2020
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 393611
  Adult

Parque Nacional Patagonia
Santa Cruz
Argentina
03/13/2020
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 392615
  Adult

Puerto Deseado
Santa Cruz
Argentina
03/09/2020
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 392603
  Adult

Puerto Deseado
Santa Cruz
Argentina
03/09/2020
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 392602
  Adult

Puerto Deseado
Santa Cruz
Argentina
03/09/2020
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 273508
  Adult

Parque Provincial Aconcagua
Mendoza
Argentina
02/23/2018
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 251720
  Adult

Parque Provincial Aconcagua
Mendoza
Argentina
02/23/2018
Jorge Schlemmer



 View all photographs of the species




 Add a photography of this species





Last Vocalizations published




 Add an audio of this species





Last Filmings published




 Add a film of this species





 Reports


 Detail of places sorted by number of records








Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
226180401/03/2025ArgentinaCatamarcaEmbalse Cortaderas, CortaderasJorge Schlemmer
175098916/04/2023ArgentinaSan LuisParque Nacional Sierra de las QuijadasJorge Schlemmer
175096615/04/2023ArgentinaMendozaReserva Natural VillavicencioJorge Schlemmer
133867026/12/2020ArgentinaMendozaParque Provincial AconcaguaJorge Schlemmer
123452416/03/2020ArgentinaSanta CruzCañadón de los Paraguayos, Puerto DeseadoJorge Schlemmer
134792013/03/2020ArgentinaSanta CruzPortal Cañadon Pinturas, Parque Nacional PatagoniaJorge Schlemmer
123292909/03/2020ArgentinaSanta CruzGruta de Lourdes, Puerto DeseadoJorge Schlemmer
70850923/02/2018ArgentinaMendozaParque Provincial AconcaguaJorge Schlemmer
65926409/12/2017ArgentinaCatamarcaEmbalse Cortaderas, CortaderasJorge Schlemmer
Page 1

 Add a record of this species

Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Grey-hooded Sierra Finch (Phrygilus gayi) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 15/04/2026.