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The black-and-yellow grosbeak (Mycerobas icterioides) is a species of finch native to the northern parts of the Indian subcontinent, primarily the lower and middle Himalayas. It is in the family Fringillidae. The species ranges across Afghanistan, India, Nepal and Pakistan where its natural habitat is temperate forests.
The yellow grosbeak (Pheucticus chrysopeplus), also known as the Mexican yellow grosbeak, is a medium-sized seed-eating bird in the same family as the northern cardinal, "tropical" or "New World" buntings, and "cardinal-grosbeaks" or New World grosbeaks.
Chinese grosbeak or yellow-billed grosbeak, E. migratoria; The four species in the South Asian genus Mycerobas: Black-and-yellow grosbeak, M. icterioides; Collared grosbeak, M. affinis; Spot-winged grosbeak, M. melanozanthos; White-winged grosbeak, M. carnipes; grosbeak bullfinch. The pine grosbeak, Pinicola enucleator, a Holarctic pine forest ...
The beak color is yellow (hence the common name of "yellow-billed grosbeak") with a black tip. The body is of a uniform gray color, darker on the back and wings and lighter and tending to silver on the belly, with accentuated brown shades on the sides.
Yellow grosbeak. Pheucticus chrysopeplus (Vigors, 1832) Pacific slope of Mexico from central Sonora to northwestern Oaxaca, and in southern Chiapas and Guatemala: Size: Habitat: Diet: LC Black-thighed grosbeak. Pheucticus tibialis Lawrence, 1867: Costa Rica and western Panama. Size: Habitat: Diet: LC Golden grosbeak. Pheucticus chrysogaster ...
The winners of the 2024 European Wildlife Photographer of the Year awards have been announced. Launched in 2001, this competition is one of the most prestigious in modern nature photography.
The golden grosbeak (Pheucticus chrysogaster), also known as golden-bellied grosbeak or southern yellow grosbeak, is a species of grosbeak in the family Cardinalidae. It is similar to, and has sometimes been considered conspecific with, the yellow grosbeak. The golden grosbeak is found in Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Trinidad and Tobago, and Venezuela.
One of these was the yellow-green grosbeak. Linnaeus included a terse description, used the binomial name Loxia canadensis and cited Brisson's work. [4] Linnaeus mistakenly claimed that the species occurred in Canada rather than Cayenne and introduced the specific name canadensis for Canada where the bird does not occur. [5]