Boreal Bird Blog    

Dr. Jeff Wells is the Senior Scientist for the Boreal Songbird Initiative. During his time at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and as the Audubon Society's National Conservation Director, Dr. Wells earned a reputation as one of the nation's leading bird experts and conservation biologists. He is now dedicated to understanding and protecting the land where North America's birds are born and raised, the Boreal Forest of Canada and Alaska. Check back regularly to read Dr. Wells' perspectives on the conservation, migration and interesting habits of Boreal birds.

One in a Hundred

While scanning the flocks for Pine Siskins at my feeder this winter (I also blogged about Siskins back in October), I spotted an oddly distinctive one.   I studied it closely, wondering at first if it could be a Eurasian Siskin which would be an exceptional rarity.  I took lots of photos and video of the bird (some of which you can see here), and then did some homework. 

It turns out that I am not the first person to encounter this question.  Years ago some people in Nova Scotia had a similar experience.  They ended up writing an article about these aberrant birds which the authors termed “green-morph” Pine Siskins and how to tell them apart from the very similar looking female Eurasian Siskin. You can read the entire article here:
http://fog.ccsf.cc.ca.us/~jmorlan/siskin_scan.pdf

Based on museum specimens, the authors estimated that the green-morph birds occurred at a frequency of about one in a hundred. They found no evidence of the birds occurring more frequently in one geographic area versus another. But David Sibley, in his famous field guide, illustrates what is apparently a version of this same variant that he terms a “yellow” variant and notes “scarce; most frequent in southwest.” I would love to know if that is indeed true but I haven’t come across anything that documents that the variants are more frequent in one place or another.

Apparently the green-morph variant is caused by a deficiency in dark pigments which results in the individuals appearing pale and greenish and the yellow in the plumage is less masked so appears brighter and more extensive.

Quite a few observers have written about and posted photos of green-morph Pine Siskins and for those interested I have posted a library of links to these at the bottom of this entry, below the photos.

An interesting article entitled “The Occurrence of Green-morph Pine Siskins in the Siskin Irruption of 1989-1990″ can be accessed here: http://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/NABB/v021n03/p0085-p0087.pdf

After finding this particularly striking siskin at my feeder, I have paid more attention and I have noted several other green-morph Pine Siskins, though most are much paler overall than the first bird which had very contrasting dark cheeks and cap. I have had at least one query as to why I didn’t think this bird was a female Eurasian Siskin.  Based on the article I mention above and some reference books, some of the characters to look for that indicate a variant Pine Siskin versus Eurasian Siskin are:

·         Head and bill shape consistent with Pine Siskins
          (thin, straight bill)

·         Yellow in the undertail coverts

·         Extensive yellow in tail and flight feathers

·         Subdued streaking on flanks

This bird displays at least three of the four characters (it does have fairly dark and extensive flank streaking but normal Pine Siskins do as well) though the 2-3 other pale green-morph birds that I documented display all four characteristics including the subdued flank streaking.

So, it awaits the judgment of you the reader if you desire to make a call.

Below are more photos of the most striking individual as well as the other paler individuals as well as some “normal” Pine Siskins—all from my feeders in Maine.  Even the “normal” Pine Siskins show some significant variation in the darkness of plumage.

A darker Pine Siskin:

Here are the bottom halves of a normal and green-morph Pine Siskin:

A library of photos and discussion about green-morph Pine Siskins below:

http://stokesbirdingblog.blogspot.com/2009/01/green-morph-pine-siskin.html

http://www.martinreid.com/Main%20website/siskin2.html

http://aviantendencies.blogspot.com/2009/01/real-green-morph-pine-siskin-i-think.html

http://pioneerbirding.blogspot.com/2009/02/third-green-morph-pine-siskin-0210.html

http://home.earthlink.net/~pomarine3/id8.html

http://www.flickr.com/photos/sa_young/sets/72157612564542509/

http://ncios.org/blog/

http://www.rarebird.org/forum/forum_posts.asp?TID=3703&PID=10703

5 Responses to “One in a Hundred”

  1. Jill McElderry-Maxwell Says:

    Jeff – we also hosted a beautiful green morph Pine Siskin here in Benton from December through the end of February. It was truly stunning when compared to the “typical” PISI. Like you, I had initial high hopes for a female EUSI, but the bird definitely fit the parameters for a green morph PISI. Our bird had a white spot on a tail feather that persisted throughout the time we saw it – this is lacking on the photos you posted, so we clearly had two different green morphs in relatively close proximity.

  2. Jeff Wells Says:

    Hi Jill,

    Was your bird one of the overall very pale ones or like the first bird that I show above in the video with the darker contrasting cheeks and cap? I believe I may have had at least two of the pale individuals and then the one contrasting bird. Send a photo!

  3. Leta Bird Says:

    Living in Georgia, we only occasionally have had Siskins at our feeders until this year. I noticed some wide variations in the colors and behaviors. At first I was looking in the bird books to find out what kind of bird that yellow one was. Although all of the pisi were aggressive, it seemed to me that the green-morph pisi were much more aggressive on the feeders than the “normal” pisi. Many days I watched a green-morph pisi push all of the other birds off of the feeders. Even birds such as cardinals which were much bigger. I wondered if anyone else had noticed this. We had quite a few green-morph pisi but I failed to count the normals and the green morph separately. As of today we still have at least 15 pisi coming to the feeders but none of them are green-morph. They made this year’s count stand out.

  4. Parrie Pinyan Says:

    Thank you, Dr. Wells.

    Parrie
    Canton, GA USA

  5. Jeff Wells Says:

    Hi Leta Bird,

    Very interesting about the agressiveness. I hadn’t noticed that directly myself. Wonder when the siskins will head back north from Georgia? Did you post any photos of your birds anywhere?

    Jeff

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