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Band-tailed Sierra Finch

Rhopospina alaudina
(Kittlitz, FH, 1833)
Yal Platero

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

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Records from Sierras de los Comechingones

Conservation status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Synonyms: Phrygilus alaudinus, Porphyrospiza alaudina, Corydospiza alaudina, Fringilla alaudina.

Subspecies:


Description: A high-Andean seedeater about 14 cm long, with bright yellow bill and legs in both sexes and a white band at the base of the tail, very visible in flight. Male: bluish gray to lead gray, with slightly dusky lores and fine dark streaks on the back; belly and undertail coverts whitish. In breeding plumage the bill becomes a deeper yellow and the face darker. Female: brown, strongly streaked above; conspicuous pale eyering and pale belly with variable streaking; bill and legs yellow but duller than in the male. Juvenile: similar to the female, browner and duller. Easily distinguished from the Band-tailed Seedeater (R. fruticeti) by the white tail band (absent in fruticeti), while fruticeti shows white wingbars absent in this species. In addition, the female of this species has a conspicuous pale periocular area, while the Band-tailed Seedeater female shows darker cinnamon cheeks and periocular area.

Geographical distribution: Andes from Venezuela and Colombia south through Peru, Bolivia, and central Chile. In Argentina: the northwest (Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, Catamarca) and the sierras of Córdoba and San Luis, between 1,600 and 3,500 m. Resident with altitudinal movements.

Habitat: High-Andean shrub steppes, ravines, stony plains with scattered shrubs, rocky outcrops, and mountain slopes. Also found in open highland grasslands.

Behavior: Fairly terrestrial. Moves in pairs or small groups, and in winter joins mixed flocks with other seedeaters and sierra-finches. The male performs a characteristic aerial display, rising up to 20 m and descending “parachute-style” while singing. Flight is low and undulating. Song is sharp, metallic, and scratchy, repeated in series and given both from perches and during display flights.

Diet: Mainly seeds and, to a lesser extent, invertebrates, which it searches for mostly on the ground.

Reproduction: Nest on the ground, among grasses or shrubs; a cup made of fine grasses and soft materials. Clutch of up to 5 greenish eggs with brown and lilac spots.

Conservation status: Not threatened. Locally common in suitable habitats.


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




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Last published photographs

Foto
Photography ID: 412658
  Adult

Sierras de los Comechingones
San Luis
Argentina
04/22/2017
Jose Luis Vera
Foto
Photography ID: 27856
  Adult

Sierras de los Comechingones
San Luis
Argentina
10/13/2013
Jorge Omar Lanza
Foto
Photography ID: 13490
  Adult

Sierras de los Comechingones
San Luis
Argentina
05/26/2012
Edith Polverini
Foto
Photography ID: 8937
  Immature

Sierras de los Comechingones
San Luis
Argentina
09/17/2011
Nicolas Olejnik



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Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
129397722/04/2017ArgentinaSan LuisCamino del filo, Merlo, Sierras de los ComechingonesJose Luis Vera
29325808/06/2015ArgentinaSan LuisCamino del filo, Merlo, Sierras de los ComechingonesNicolas Olejnik
7541613/10/2013ArgentinaSan LuisLos Molles, camino a los 7 Saltos, Sierras de los ComechingonesJorge Omar Lanza
3324226/05/2012ArgentinaSan LuisSierras de los ComechingonesEdith Polverini
1909519/09/2011ArgentinaSan LuisSierras de los ComechingonesNicolas Olejnik
1932417/09/2011ArgentinaSan LuisSierras de los ComechingonesNicolas Olejnik
Page 1

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Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Band-tailed Sierra Finch (Rhopospina alaudina) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 15/04/2026.