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Tucuman Mountain Finch

Poospiza baeri
(Oustalet, J-FÉ, 1904)
Monterita Serrana

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

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Records from El Infiernillo

Conservation status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Other common names: Monterita Tucumana, Montañero.

Synonyms: Compsospiza baeri, Buarremon baeri.


Description: Bird about 17–18 cm long, mainly lead-gray, with the forehead, throat, sides of the neck, and undertail coverts of an orange-rufous color. It shows a reddish crescent below the eye and a fine supercilium of the same tone. The wings and tail are dark gray. The female is similar, although with less rufous extension on the throat. Juveniles are brownish-gray, with streaks on the back and belly.

Geographical distribution: Endemic to northwestern Argentina. It ranges from southern Bolivia through the provinces of Jujuy, Salta, Tucumán, and Catamarca to the north of La Rioja. It is especially characteristic of the Sierras de Aconquija and the Calchaquí Valleys and Ranges in Tucumán, where it inhabits humid grasslands, shrubby ravines, and fragmented Polylepis forests.

Habitat: Inhabits mountain ranges between 2,800 and 3,400 m a.s.l., in humid high-altitude grasslands dominated by Festuca hieronymus and dense shrublands of Iochroma australe, Baccharis sp., Satureja parvifolia, and other typical species of the upper montane belt, between the alder (Alnus) forest line and queñua (Polylepis) forests. It is found on steep slopes with dense vegetation and rocks, where it is locally common.

Feeding: Feeds mainly on seeds and small arthropods, which it searches for on the ground, among grasses or low shrubs. During the breeding season, it is usually seen in pairs, while in winter it joins mixed foraging flocks.

Behavior: Generally moves by walking or hopping among rocks, shrubs, and mid-level branches. It maintains an upright posture and appears confident yet calm. Its song is a series of short whistles of variable tone, and it has a sharp contact call (“sip”), sometimes producing a faster “tip-tip... tip... tip-tip” when alarmed.

Nesting: Nests among shrubs and rocks, on steep slopes with dense, tangled vegetation. Nests recorded in Tucumán were hidden, about 1 m above the ground, usually in Baccharis sp. shrubs. They were compact cup-shaped, built with dry grasses, leaves, and Festuca hieronymus inflorescences, and lined with fine horsehair; the exterior was bulkier and somewhat untidy, with small twigs. The recorded clutch had three chicks. The species may breed between January and March.

Conservation status: Although it can be locally common in suitable sites, its populations are small and vulnerable to habitat fragmentation and degradation. It is categorized in Argentina as Insufficiently Known (IC) and internationally as Near Threatened (NT), due to its limited geographical range and the pressure on the montane forests and high Andean grasslands it occupies.


Authors of this compilation: Diego Carus and Maria Belén Dri - 09/11/2025




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Last published photographs

Foto
Photography ID: 665462
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
12/06/2025
Maria Belén Dri
Foto
Photography ID: 664405
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
12/06/2025
Diego Carus
Foto
Photography ID: 629994
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
03/25/2025
Gabriel Carbajales
Foto
Photography ID: 614562
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
10/27/2024
Guillermo Marcaida
Foto
Photography ID: 614184
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
10/27/2024
Elsa Longo
Foto
Photography ID: 607014
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
01/13/2024
Viviana Fuentes
Foto
Photography ID: 606956
 
El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
01/07/2024
Viviana Fuentes
Foto
Photography ID: 601496
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
09/12/2024
Enrique Sanz
Foto
Photography ID: 594497
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
07/14/2024
Gustavo Daniel González
Foto
Photography ID: 594433
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
01/28/2024
Jorge Blackhall
Foto
Photography ID: 591916
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
01/14/2024
Pablo Moreno
Foto
Photography ID: 559506
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
11/29/2023
Pablo Alberto Re



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Last Vocalizations published




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Last Filmings published


Video ID: 6875
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
12/12/2025
Diego Carus
Video ID: 6156
  Adult

El Infiernillo
Tucumán
Argentina
01/15/2024
Viviana Fuentes



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 Reports


 Detail of places sorted by number of records








Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
240642212/12/2025ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del río Churqui, El InfiernilloDiego Carus
240769306/12/2025ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del Barón, El InfiernilloDiego Carus
240749006/12/2025ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del Barón, El InfiernilloMaria Belén Dri
240643506/12/2025ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del río Churqui, El InfiernilloMaria Belén Dri
240387106/12/2025ArgentinaTucumánQuebrada del río Churqui, El InfiernilloDiego Carus
227096325/03/2025ArgentinaTucumánSobre Ruta 307 entre El Infiernillo y Tafí del Valle, El Infiernillo2Gabriel Carbajales
220841427/10/2024ArgentinaTucumánSobre Ruta 307 entre El Infiernillo y Tafí del Valle, El InfiernilloGuillermo Marcaida
220786427/10/2024ArgentinaTucumánSobre Ruta 307 entre El Infiernillo y Tafí del Valle, El InfiernilloElsa Longo
215770412/09/2024ArgentinaTucumánSobre Ruta 307 entre El Infiernillo y Tafí del Valle, El InfiernilloEnrique Sanz
212748014/07/2024ArgentinaTucumánEl InfiernilloGustavo Daniel González
Page 1

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Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Tucuman Mountain Finch (Poospiza baeri) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 15/03/2026.