Don't want to see ads? Sign up...





Black-hooded Sierra Finch

Phrygilus atriceps
(d´Orbigny, ACVMD; de Lafresnaye, NFAA, 1837)
Comesebo Cabeza Negra

Family: Thraupidae
Order: Passeriformes
Class: Aves
Phylum / Division: Chordata
Kingdom: Animalia

 Request change
Filters

Records from Departamento Rosario de Lerma

Conservation status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Synonyms: Emberiza atriceps.


Description: Species restricted to the northwestern Andes, 16–18 cm long, with a thick and pointed bill. Male: black hood, wings, and tail; ochre-orange mantle; orange chest grading to yellow; and white undertail. Female: similar but duller, with a slate-gray hood, paler orange back, and yellowish belly with finely streaked throat. Both have brown irises and dark gray legs. Juveniles are brownish, duller, and show a pale gray hood. It may be confused with the Andean Sierra Finch (P. gayi), with which it overlaps in parts of northwestern Argentina; however, the Black-hooded male is unmistakable due to its black hood instead of gray. The female Andean has a more extensive white belly.

Distribution: Species of the dry Andean puna, from southern Peru, western Bolivia, and northern Chile, to northwestern Argentina (Jujuy, Salta, Catamarca, La Rioja, and high areas of San Juan) in high Andean environments. Typical elevation 2,500–4,000 m, locally lower in winter.

Habitat: High-altitude arid shrublands, rocky slopes, hillsides with cacti, high Andean ravines, edges of peatlands, and semi-humid areas surrounded by shrubs. Common in Andean human settlements and exotic tree plantings in high-altitude towns.

Behavior: Confiding, usually in pairs or small groups; in winter it may join mixed flocks. Perches on exposed rocks and shrubs. Forages mainly on the ground, walking or hopping among rocks and cacti. Males sing a short, monotonous series of metallic notes.

Diet: Omnivorous. Eats seeds, shoots, and arthropods. Forages on the ground, low shrubs, or human structures. May join mixed groups with siskins and warbling finches.

Breeding: Nest placed in shrubs or rocks, an open cup made of small sticks, stems, and grasses, with an interior of wool, hair, and fine fibers.

Conservation status: Species not considered threatened. Common in the puna and high Andean environments.


Authors of this compilation: Diego Carus and Maria Belén Dri – 06/12/2025




Loading map...




Last published photographs



 Add a photography of this species





Last Vocalizations published




 Add an audio of this species





Last Filmings published




 Add a film of this species





 Reports


 Detail of places sorted by number of records








Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
230266427/08/2024ArgentinaSaltaDepartamento Rosario de LermaJuan Cambria
230142127/08/2024ArgentinaSaltaDepartamento Rosario de LermaMagdalena Gerez De Larminat
229901527/08/2024ArgentinaSaltaDepartamento Rosario de LermaMaría Cecilia De Larminat
229248627/08/2024ArgentinaSaltaDepartamento Rosario de LermaJeremías Pintos
228561027/08/2024ArgentinaSaltaDepartamento Rosario de LermaFelipe Aguilar
218682227/08/2024ArgentinaSaltaDepartamento Rosario de LermaNaré Berduc
217349727/08/2024ArgentinaSaltaDepartamento Rosario de LermaRalph Roberts
216955727/08/2024ArgentinaSaltaDepartamento Rosario de LermaBautista Villanueva
215568627/08/2024ArgentinaSaltaDepartamento Rosario de LermaNazareno Del Carlo
215176727/08/2024ArgentinaSaltaDepartamento Rosario de LermaFaustino Hollmann
Page 1

 Add a record of this species

Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Black-hooded Sierra Finch (Phrygilus atriceps) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 25/03/2026.