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Purple Finch

Purple Finch. Photo by Patrick Comins.

Purple Finch
Haemorhous purpureus
Purple Finches are chunky, streaky brown and whitish birds. Males have pinkish-red plumage that starts most intensely at the crown and gets more faded down towards the lower and back parts of the body; females and immature birds are all streaky brown and white.

Both sexes have thick, cone-shaped bills with a sharp, pointy tip well-adapted to crack seeds. If you are looking at them while they are backlit, their bills are smaller than cardinals but larger than sparrows. They have noticeably short, notched tails and a white stripe behind their eyes. Gilles Carter took the video, above, at the Milford Point Coastal Center’s “magic fountain.”

Female/immature Purple Finch. Photo by Gilles Carter.

Purple Finches have a close relative that is far more common in this area, House Finches (Haemorhous mexicanus). You can tell the difference by plumage, bill shape and tail length.

Female Purple Finches are more dramatically streaky brown and white than female House Finches. Male Purple Finches are less intensely red overall than House Finches, and the color is far less variable in Purple than in House Finches.

Also, you can see even in a silhouette that the Purple Finch bill is pointier than the House Finch bill, which is more blunt. The Purple Finch tail length appears considerably shorter than House Finch tails.

Because they are seed eaters, you probably will see them at your bird feeder. You can put up any standard tube feeder and keep it full of high quality seed such as black oil sunflower seeds.

Visit a nearby sanctuary, especially one that keeps feeders stocked and has fresh water nearby. Purple Finches are forest species, so if you are afield, keep your eyes out for them along with chickadees, titmice and other forest songbirds.

Conservation status: Purple Finch populations are of low conservation concern because their numbers have remained stable over the last several decades according to the IUCN.

Saltmarsh Sparrow