All Species Animalia

Amazona finschi (P.L.Sclater, 1864) is a animal in the Psittacidae family, order Psittaciformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Amazona finschi (P.L.Sclater, 1864) (Amazona finschi (P.L.Sclater, 1864))
Animalia

Amazona finschi (P.L.Sclater, 1864)

Amazona finschi (P.L.Sclater, 1864)

Amazona finschi, the lilac-crowned amazon, is a green parrot endemic to western Mexico with an introduced population in Southern California.

Identify with AI — Offline
Family
Genus
Amazona
Order
Psittaciformes
Class
Aves

About Amazona finschi (P.L.Sclater, 1864)

Adult Plumage Base Coloration

The adult lilac-crowned amazon (Amazona finschi) has primarily green plumage, with yellowish underparts and black edging across most feathers. Its forehead is maroon, while its neck, nape, and crown are a light blue-lilac shade.

Head Feather Details

The cheeks and ear coverts are greenish yellow, with none of the black edging seen on most of the bird’s plumage. Primary flight feathers are dark blue, and secondary flight feathers are green with dark blue tips.

Wing Feather Markings

The first five secondary feathers have a bright red speculum along their edges. The wing coverts, underside of the flight feathers, and tail are all green; the tail is tipped with a yellowish coloring matching that of the cheeks and ear coverts.

Soft Part Coloration

The beak, orbital rings, and legs are pale brown-grey, and adult irises are amber-colored.

Juvenile Plumage Differences

Juvenile lilac-crowned amazons look very similar to adults, with only two key differences. Juveniles have dark brown irises instead of the amber color seen in adults, and they have far fewer maroon feathers on the forehead.

Juvenile Maturation Timeline

Juveniles begin developing adult plumage and eye color after around one year of age.

Native Range

This parrot is endemic to the Pacific coast of Mexico, where its range extends from southeastern Sonora and southwestern Chihuahua down to southern Oaxaca.

Elevation Range in Mexico

In Sinaloa and northern Nayarit, its range sits above 375 meters elevation; it only reaches sea level starting in southern Nayarit, and stays at lower elevations through Jalisco and Oaxaca.

Native Population Threats

The lilac-crowned amazon’s natural Mexican habitat is under threat, and population declines have been recorded across almost all of its natural range. Data and resident accounts show the species’ total population range has shrunk by 20% due to habitat loss.

Introduced California Population

An increasing population of approximately 100 individuals lives in Southern California, concentrated particularly in the San Gabriel Valley and Orange County. This observed increase may be due to more reliable population counting methods than were used in past years.

California Habitat Use

The California population is most often found in residential areas. Occasionally, it forms mixed nesting groups with red-crowned parrots, in either native conifer forests or areas with non-native captive-grown plants.

Photo: (c) Mexfant Maravilloso, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Mexfant Maravilloso · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Psittaciformes Psittacidae Amazona

More from Psittacidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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