British finches
The British finches are made up of several species of finch which were formerly very popular as cage birds in Great Britain. They are not currently commonplace, but are still kept by a few dedicated fanciers.
History
In Victorian times British finches were hugely popular as cage birds throughout the British Isles, often replacing canaries. Due to a lack of protection, thousands of birds were captured for the pet trade every year.Their popularity is reflected in the well-known British music hall song, "My [Old Man (Said Follow the Van)]", in the line, "I walked behind wiv me old cock linnet..." referring to the linnet.
Regulation
British finches are often associated with mules, a term used by cage bird breeders to refer to hybrids of finch species bred in captivity, such as that of a goldfinch and canary. There are now strict ringing regulations on British finches in places such as the UK, but they are still kept by aviculturists who care for them in much the same way as canaries. The seed mixture in the UK known as British Finch & Mule is their basic diet.Since the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981, it has been illegal to capture, attempt to capture or sell any British bird, and only those on Schedule 3 Part 1, may be sold if they are closed ringed and proof can be given that they were bred in captivity.
Species
British finches are quite simply birds in the finch family which to this day live wild in the British Isles.The species most popular include:
- Genus Fringilla - bramblings and chaffinches
- *Common chaffinch
- *Brambling
- Subfamily Carduelinae - linnets, redpolls, goldfinches, greenfinches, some siskins
- *Greenfinch
- *Redpoll
- *Siskin
- *Goldfinch
- *Twite
- *Linnet
- Genus Loxia - crossbills
- *Common crossbill
- Genus Pyrrhula - bullfinches
- *Eurasian bullfinch