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Monte Yellow Finch

Sicalis mendozae
(Sharpe, RB, 1888)
Jilguero de Monte

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

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Records from Parque Nacional Talampaya

Conservation status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Synonyms: Pseudochloris mendozae.


Description: A 14 cm siskin, very yellow, and one of the brightest siskins, surpassed only by the Puna Siskin (S. lutea). Short, straight bill. Short wings, square tail. Male: head and underparts intense yellow, with no olive tones. Well-defined gray lore. Back uniform (clean yellow-olive, without mottling or streaking). Rump bright olive, conspicuous. Male (non-breeding): grayish back. Female: brownish gray with a sulfur-yellow patch in the center of the belly (sometimes extending to the throat). Olive rump. Compared to the Olivaceous Siskin (S. olivascens), the Montaraz is much more yellow and lacks olive on the head and chest. The Olivaceous has mottled or streaked back; the Montaraz is uniform. The Montaraz’s gray lore is bold; in the Olivaceous it is weak and poorly contrasted.

Distribution: Endemic to western Argentina. From northeastern Catamarca and Tucumán southward through La Rioja, San Juan, Mendoza, and northern San Luis. Elevation 900–2100 m (down to 600–700 m in sierras and desert basins). In Tucumán it is frequent in Amaicha del Valle and surrounding large canyons.

Habitat: Arid habitats of the Monte ecoregion. Shrublands of Larrea, cactus zones, rocky walls, ravines, and canyons. Sparse vegetation, bare soils, and extremely dry environments.

Behavior: Feeds mainly on the ground, alone or in pairs; in winter gathers in small flocks (up to 20–30 individuals). Moves daily to feeding areas and returns to communal roosts at dusk. Strongly associated with ravines and rocky outcrops, where it also sings. Its song consists of short metallic syllables, rising and falling: “chiriúp–chriip–chri-chri–chii,” varying in rhythm and pitch; very rhythmic, harsh, and with imitations included in the sequence. Often sings from rock walls or exposed rocks.

Diet: Almost exclusively seeds. Searches on the ground or hovers to pluck grass seeds. Occasionally insects.

Reproduction: Nests in cavities of earthen banks or rocky crevices, sometimes in small groups. Cup nest made of grasses, lined with hair.

Conservation status: Not threatened. Endemic to Argentina but common within its habitat.


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




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Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
202967402/05/2024ArgentinaLa RiojaParque Nacional TalampayaSantiago Juan Torres
196923109/02/2024ArgentinaLa RiojaParque Nacional Talampaya1María Alejandra Sosa
196919809/02/2024ArgentinaLa RiojaParque Nacional Talampaya1Jorge La Grotteria
159207128/03/2022ArgentinaLa RiojaCerca de la ruta, Parque Nacional TalampayaSilvio Lamothe
90532501/04/2019ArgentinaLa RiojaAlrededores de la entrada y cañón, Parque Nacional Talampaya1Dario Juan Wendeler
77120210/02/2018ArgentinaLa RiojaParque Nacional Talampaya1Facundo Moyano Peña
55359428/02/2017ArgentinaLa RiojaParque Nacional Talampaya1Camilo Ávila
54904828/02/2017ArgentinaLa RiojaAlrededores de la entrada y cañón, Parque Nacional Talampaya2Dario Juan Wendeler
71564715/07/2015ArgentinaLa RiojaParque Nacional TalampayaMiguel A Villarruel
19066504/10/2014ArgentinaLa RiojaParque Nacional TalampayaNicolas Chimento
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Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Monte Yellow Finch (Sicalis mendozae) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 12/03/2026.