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2011 Carlos Henrique Luz Nunes de Almeida
CalPhotos
This Way Birding Guide: www.carduelis.bio.br
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2011 Carlos Henrique Luz Nunes de Almeida
CalPhotos
This Way Birding Guide: www.carduelis.bio.br
-
2011 Carlos Henrique Luz Nunes de Almeida
CalPhotos
This Way Birding Guide: www.carduelis.bio.br
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2018 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
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2018 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
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2018 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
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2018 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
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2018 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
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2013 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
Saffron Finch (Sicalis flaveola) is a tanager from South America that is common in open and semi-open areas in lowlands outside the Amazon Basin. They have a wide distribution in Colombia, northern Venezuela (where it is called 'canario de tejado' or 'roof canary'), western Ecuador, western Peru, eastern and southern Brazil (where it is called 'canrio da terra' or 'earth canary'), Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, northern Argentina, and Trinidad and Tobago. It has also been introduced to Hawaii, Puerto Rico and elsewhere.
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2013 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
Saffron Finch (Sicalis flaveola) is a tanager from South America that is common in open and semi-open areas in lowlands outside the Amazon Basin. They have a wide distribution in Colombia, northern Venezuela (where it is called 'canario de tejado' or 'roof canary'), western Ecuador, western Peru, eastern and southern Brazil (where it is called 'canrio da terra' or 'earth canary'), Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, northern Argentina, and Trinidad and Tobago. It has also been introduced to Hawaii, Puerto Rico and elsewhere.
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2013 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
Saffron Finch (Sicalis flaveola) is a tanager from South America that is common in open and semi-open areas in lowlands outside the Amazon Basin. They have a wide distribution in Colombia, northern Venezuela (where it is called 'canario de tejado' or 'roof canary'), western Ecuador, western Peru, eastern and southern Brazil (where it is called 'canrio da terra' or 'earth canary'), Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, northern Argentina, and Trinidad and Tobago. It has also been introduced to Hawaii, Puerto Rico and elsewhere.
-
2011 Carlos Henrique Luz Nunes de Almeida
CalPhotos
This Way Birding Guide: www.carduelis.bio.br