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Group of birds From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The seedeaters are a form taxon of seed-eating passerine birds with a distinctively conical bill.
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (October 2023) |
Most are Central and South American birds that were formerly placed in the American sparrow family (Passerellidae), but are now known to be tanagers (Thraupidae) closely related to Darwins finches. Indeed, some of the birds listed here seedeaters are closer to these "finches", while the more "true" seedeaters form a clade with some tanagers. A few "atypical" seedeaters are closely related to certain tanagers, many of which (such as the flowerpiercers) have peculiarly adapted bills.
In addition, there are some African passerines called seedeaters. They belong to the serin genus (Serinus) of the true finch family (Fringillidae), but might need to be separated with their closest relatives in Crithagra.
True seedeaters
Related to Darwin's finches
Atypical seedeaters
Relatives of true seedeaters
These tanagers are the true seedeaters' closest relatives:
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