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FINCH RESEARCH NETWORK

FINCH RESEARCH NETWORK

Dedicated to the study and conservation of finches and their habitats globally

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  • Info
    • About
    • Our Team
    • Support & Collaboration
    • Get Involved
  • Projects
    • International Road to Recovery Evening Grosbeak Project
    • The Crossbill Project
    • The Honeycreeper Project
    • The Rosy-Finch Project
    • The Purple Finch Project
    • The Redpoll Project
    • The Hawfinch Project
    • The Bullfinch Project
    • The Common Rosefinch Project
  • Grants
    • Edward S. Brinkley Finch Research Grant
    • Grants RFP
  • Species
    • Grosbeaks
    • Bullfinches
    • Rosy-Finches
    • Rosefinches & Purple Finches
    • Honeycreepers (Hawaii)
    • Redpolls
    • Crossbills
    • Siskins & Goldfinches
  • Finch Forecast
    • Winter Finch Forecast 2024-2025
    • Winter Finch Forecast 2023-2024
    • Winter Finch Forecast 2022-2023
    • Winter Finch Forecast 2021-2022
    • Winter Finch Forecast 2020-2021
  • Resources
    • NEWS/BLOG
    • Literature
    • Media & Presentations
    • Nature Expeditions
    • FiRN Feedercam
    • Healthy Bird Feeding Practices
    • Gallery
  • The FiRN Shop
  • Contact

The Evening Grosbeak Project

International Road to Recovery

The Evening Grosbeak has declined 92% since 1970 and is listed as a species of conservation concern.

View Project

Research

FiRN is dedicated to the study and conservation of finches and their habitats globally. View FiRN’s project portfolio

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Live Feeder Cam

We’re back! Livestream of Bill’s feeders in Woodland in northern Maine. Sponsored by the Finch Research Network and Aspen Song Wild Bird Seed.

View Cam

Winter Finch Forecast

This year’s Winter Finch Forecast will be a mosaic of movements differing in intensity and area across the species.

View Forecast

The concept of the Finch Research Network (FiRN) began with Ian Newton and Ron Pittaway decades ago, making a connection between the summer cone crops of cedars, spruces, and pines and the abundance—or scarcity—of siskins, crossbills, and grosbeaks in the winter. It was discovered that predictions could be made about the winter finches based on what he saw during the summer on coniferous trees.

Mission: FiRN is dedicated to the study and conservation of finches and their habitats globally.

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Featured FiRN Projects

The Crossbill Project

The Crossbill Project Photo: @ Jens Halbauer Purpose is to provide a stable, long-term home for Crossbill research over a broad front: field observations, recordings, assortative mating and call type delineation by sound, range and DNA. Provide information to the scientific community on the validity of call types and potential full-species separations for flight call types, geographically isolated populations…

Learn More The Crossbill Project

The Honeycreeper Project

The Honeycreeper Project The iconic finches of Hawai‘i are facing a conservation crisis. Non-native predators, the loss of habitat, and invasive species have negatively affected them for hundreds of years, and these issues continue to be problematic, but it’s the introduced avian malaria that is the greatest threat to their survival. Climate change leading to…

Learn More The Honeycreeper Project

The Purple Finch Project

The Purple Finch Project Field recording and study of the differences between Type 1 (western) and Type 2 (eastern) Purple Finches

Learn More The Purple Finch Project

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Recent Posts

FiRN 2025 Membership Newsletter

Matt
April 25, 2025

Read More FiRN 2025 Membership Newsletter

Earth Day Fundraising

Matt
April 21, 2025

Read More Earth Day Fundraising

Crossbills and Conifers in the Adirondacks, NY 2024-2025: With Additional Notes on the Other Finches and Food Crops Across the Region

Matt
April 20, 2025

Read More Crossbills and Conifers in the Adirondacks, NY 2024-2025: With Additional Notes on the Other Finches and Food Crops Across the Region

See All Posts

227

Finch Species
Worldwide

60

Red Listed
Finch Species

41

Endangered or Extinct
Finch Species

Get Involved

Whether it’s through sound recording finches, making a donation, adding scientific expertise via writing, research or support, or having gear you could loan, there are several ways you can contribute to building the Finch Research Network that Ian Newton and Ron Pittaway started for us all 50 years ago!

Learn More

Partners

Support & Collaboration

  • Tyler Hoar and Ron Pittaway | Finch Forecast
  • Freeport Wild Bird Supply
  • Coastal Virginia Wildlife Observatory
  • Cayuga Bird Club Ithaca
  • Aspen Song Wild Bird Feed
  • David Yeany Western Pennsylvania Conservancy
  • Lillian Stokes | Stokes Field Guides
  • Nathan Pieplow | Earbirding
  • Lance Benner | Pasadena Audubon
  • Cornell Lab of Ornithology
  • Jeff Groth | American Museum of Natural History
  • Jamie Cornelius | Oregon State
  • Thomas P. Hahn | UC Davis
  • Mark Robbins | U. Kansas
See Full List

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The Finch Research Network

3762 State Route 41
Cincinnatus, NY 13040

607-345-7713
info@finchnetwork.org

Please send donations to
PO Box 5431
Cortland, NY 13045

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