Quantcast

Brambling

Fringilla montifringillaOrder: PASSERIFORMESFamily: Finches (Fringillidae)
Bird database and its related content, illustrations and media is Copyright © 2002 - 2007  Whatbird.com
All rights reserved. No part of this web site may be reproduced without written permission from Mitch Waite Group.
 Privacy Policy.
Percevia® Registered in the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office.
Bird Call Credits: The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Martyn Stewart, http://www.naturesound.org, Redmond, Washington USA. The reuse or copying of bird calls in this database is strictly forbidden.
Family Buntings, Finches, Sparrows (Emberizidae)_blue
Species Fringilla montifringilla
Length5.5 - 6.25 Inches
Wingspan9.25 Inches

Brambling

Brambling: Medium-sized finch with jet-black hood extending to upper back with orange shoulder patches, throat, and breast. Underparts are buff with black-spotted flanks. Wings are black with white and orange bars. Bounding flight, rapid wing beats alternating with wings at sides.

● Song: "dzhweeeee", "check-check-check", "tweerk"

● Foraging & Feeding: Brambling: Eats seeds and insects in summer; seeds in winter; forages in trees, bushes, and on the ground.

● Breeding & nesting: Brambling: Five to seven pale blue eggs with pink and red markings are laid in a nest made of grass, hair, birch bark, and moss, held together with spider webs, and lined with hair, wool, down, and feathers. Incubation ranges from 11 to 12 days and is carried out by the female.

● Similar species: Brambling: Common Chaffinch lacks white rump, orange tints, and flecked flanks.

Flight Pattern

Somewhat bounding flight with rapid wing beats alternating with brief periods of wings pulled to sides.
Brambling Breeding Male Body Illustration
● Range & Habitat: Brambling: A Eurasian species, common but irregular as a migrant in the Bering Sea region, including the Aleutians; casual in fall and winter in southern Alaska; accidental south to Canada and northwestern U.S. states. Preferred habitats include northern forests with birch trees during breeding season; prefers agricultural fields, woodlands (especially beech), parks, and gardens during winter.
BreedingMonogamous, Pairs
PopulationRare to casual
MigrationMigratory
Weight0.8 Ounces