Volume I Part 14 (1/2)
This pretty little grey-and-white Finch is common on the Chilian side of the Andes and throughout Patagonia, and also occurs in the Mendoza district. It is a tuneful bird, lively, social, and frolicsome in disposition; in autumn and winter uniting in flocks of from fifty to three or four hundred individuals; swift of flight, and when on the wing fond of pursuing its fellows and engaging in mock battles. The song of the male is very pleasing, the voice having more depth and mellowness than is usual with the smaller fringilline singers, which, as a rule, have thin, reedy, and tremulous notes. In summer it begins singing very early, even before the faintest indication of coming daylight is visible, and at that dark silent hour the notes may be heard at a great distance and sound wonderfully sweet and impressive. During the cold season, when they live in companies, the singing-time is in the evening, when the birds are gathered in some thick-foliaged tree or bush which they have chosen for a winter roosting-place. This winter-evening song is a hurried twittering, and utterly unlike the serene note of the male bird heard on summer mornings. A little while after sunset the flock bursts into a concert, which lasts several minutes, sinking and growing louder by turns, and during which it is scarcely possible to distinguish the notes of individuals. Then follows an interval of silence, after which the singing is again renewed very suddenly and as suddenly ended.
For an hour after sunset, and when all other late singers, like the _Mimus_, have long been silent, this fitful impetuous singing is continued. Close by a house on the Rio Negro, in which I spent several months, there were three very large chanar bushes, where a mult.i.tude of Diuca Finches used to roost, and they never missed singing in the evening, however cold or rainy the weather happened to be. So fond were they of this charming habit, that when I approached the bushes or stood directly under them, the alarm caused by my presence would interrupt the performance only for a few moments, and presently they would burst into song again, the birds all the time swiftly pursuing each other amongst the foliage, often within a foot of my head.
The eggs, Darwin says (Zool. Voy. 'Beagle,' iii. p. 93), are pointed, oval, pale dirty green, thickly blotched with pale dull brown, becoming confluent and entirely coloured at the broad end.
75. CATAMENIA a.n.a.lIS (d'Orb. et Lafr.).
(RED-STAINED FINCH.)
+Catamenia a.n.a.lis+, _Burm. La-Plata Reise_, ii. p. 488 (Mendoza); _Scl. et Salv. Nomencl._ p. 31; _White, P. Z. S._ 1882, p. 599 (Catamarca). +Spermophila a.n.a.lis+, _Sharpe, Cat. B._ xii. p. 106.
_Description._--Above clear grey; wing-feathers black, edged with grey; tail black, a large white blotch on the central part of each feather, the two middle feathers excepted; beneath grey, palest on the belly; under tail-coverts rufous: whole length 50 inches, wing 28, tail 22. _Female_, above obscure brownish buff, striped with blackish; beneath dirty white.
_Hab._ Peru, Bolivia, and Argentina.
Burmeister met with this Finch on the sierras near Mendoza, and White obtained a single specimen in Catamarca.
76. CATAMENIA INORNATA (Lafr.).
(PLAIN-COLOURED FINCH.)
+Sporophila rufirostris+, _Landb. J. f. O._ 1865, p. 404 (Mendoza).
+Catamenia inornata+, _Scl. et Salv. Nomencl._ p. 31.
+Spermophila inornata+, _Sharpe, Cat. B._ xii. p. 104.
_Description._--Above dull grey, clearer on the rump; wings and tail blackish, wing-feathers edged with grey; beneath grey, under tail-coverts bright chestnut; bill red; feet brown: whole length 50 inches, wing 25, tail 22.
_Hab._ Bolivia and N. Argentina.
Examples of this species were obtained by Weisshaupt near Mendoza in 1871.
77. ZONOTRICHIA PILEATA (Bodd.).
(CHINGOLO SONG-SPARROW.)
+Zonotrichia pileata+, _Scl. et Salv. P. Z. S._ 1868, p. 139, _iid.
Nomencl._ p. 31; _Salvin, Ibis_, 1880, p. 355 (Salta); _Gibson, Ibis_, 1880, p. 28 (Buenos Ayres); _White, P. Z. S._ 1882, p. 600 (Buenos Ayres); _Barrows, Bull. Nutt. Orn. Cl._ viii. p. 131 (Concepcion). +Zonotrichia matutina+, _Burm. La-Plata Reise_, ii.
p. 486.
_Description._--Above dusky grey, striped with blackish brown; the top of the head from the bill to the nape grey; a whitish stripe from the eye to the nape; between the stripe and the grey on the crown black; a narrow chestnut ring round the neck, widening to a large patch on the sides of the chest, the patch bordered with black on its lower part; beneath, throat white; breast and belly ashy white; bill and feet light horn-colour: whole length 57 inches, wing 28, tail 22. _Female_ similar, but duller in colour and a trifle smaller.
_Hab._ Central and South America.
The common, familiar, favourite Sparrow over a large portion of the South-American continent is the β_Chingolo_.β Darwin says that βit prefers inhabited places, but has not attained the air of domestication of the English Sparrow, which bird in habits and general appearance it resembles.β As it breeds in the fields on the ground, it can never be equally familiar with man, but in appearance it is like a refined copy of the burly English Sparrow--more delicately tinted, the throat being chestnut instead of black; the head smaller and better proportioned, and with the added distinction of a crest, which it lowers and elevates at all angles to express the various feelings affecting its busy little mind.
On the treeless desert pampas the Chingolo is rarely seen, but wherever man builds a house and plants a tree there it comes to keep him company, while in cultivated and thickly settled districts it is excessively abundant, and about Buenos Ayres it literally swarms in the fields and plantations. They are not, strictly speaking, gregarious, but where food attracts them, or the shelter of a hedge on a cold windy day, thousands are frequently seen congregated in one place; when disturbed, however, these accidental flocks immediately break up, the birds scattering abroad in different directions.