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Greenish Yellow Finch

Sicalis olivascens
(d´Orbigny, ACVMD; de Lafresnaye, NFAA, 1837)
Jilguero Oliváceo

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

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Conservation status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Description: Robust 14 cm siskin with a short, conical bill and slightly curved culmen. Male: uniform olive-yellow; throat and chest with clear olive tone; back mottled or streaked; gray loral area, weakly contrasted; rump olive, only slightly more yellow than the back. Belly uniformly yellow. Female: dull brownish-gray with diffuse olive tones; grayish belly with slight yellow wash; olive rump.

Comparison with similar species:
• Monte Siskin (S. mendozae): Brighter and more yellow (almost no olive). Back uniform, without mottling or streaks. Gray loral area strongly contrasting, much more noticeable than in olivascens. Rump intense yellow, not olive.
• Puna Siskin (S. lutea): Much brighter yellow. Bill larger, thicker, and darker. Back less streaked, more homogeneous. Greater overall contrast: pure yellow, not greenish.

Geographic distribution: Andes and precordillera from Peru and Bolivia southward, north and central Chile, and northwestern Argentina. Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, Catamarca, La Rioja; between 2,000 and 3,600 m. The most common siskin in the Aconquija / Cumbres Calchaquíes region (Tucumán), descending into valleys in winter. Resident with altitudinal movements.

Habitat: Ravines, high Andean shrub-steppes, rocky slopes, rural areas, village edges, and rocky zones. Common in low vegetation and dry environments.

Behavior: Highly terrestrial. Feeds on the ground, often in large flocks, especially in winter or at dusk when moving toward communal roosts. During the breeding season it sings from shrubs or rocks. Its song is a harsh and dry series of trills and chirps, often descending, like “trrr-trrr-trrr-chrrr…”, rhythmic and not very musical.

Diet: Mainly seeds; supplements with small insects and flowers, always on the ground.

Reproduction: Nest in cliff crevices, cavities in rocks, or human-made structures. Lays 3–4 whitish eggs with brown mottling.

Conservation status: Not threatened. Locally common to abundant.


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




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Last published photographs

Foto
Photography ID: 226317
  Adult

Cuesta de Lipán
Jujuy
Argentina
10/09/2017
Alec Earnshaw
Foto
Photography ID: 226316
  Adult

Cuesta de Lipán
Jujuy
Argentina
10/09/2017
Alec Earnshaw
Foto
Photography ID: 226298
  Adult

Purmamarca
Jujuy
Argentina
10/09/2017
Alec Earnshaw
Foto
Photography ID: 66378
  Adult

Azul Pampa
Jujuy
Argentina
10/12/2014
Alec Earnshaw
Foto
Photography ID: 62139
  Adult

Copiapó
Región de Atacama
Chile
05/23/2008
Alec Earnshaw



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 Detail of places sorted by number of records








Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
63707009/10/2017ArgentinaJujuyPaseo de los Colorados, PurmamarcaAlec Earnshaw
63698409/10/2017ArgentinaJujuyCuesta de Lipán10Alec Earnshaw
63650909/10/2017ArgentinaJujuyPurmamarca, camino del colorado5Alec Earnshaw
19370813/10/2014ArgentinaJujuyLa IntermediaAlec Earnshaw
19055412/10/2014ArgentinaJujuyAzul PampaAlec Earnshaw
19054512/10/2014ArgentinaJujuyHuacaleraAlec Earnshaw
17692423/05/2008ChileRegión de AtacamaLos Loros, CopiapóAlec Earnshaw
Page 1

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Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Greenish Yellow Finch (Sicalis olivascens) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 12/04/2026.