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Canary

The Canary (Serinus canaria) evolved on a group of small islands off the West African coast in the Atlantic - the Canaries (notably Tenerife, La Gomera and La Palma), the Azores and the Madeira islands. It’s also found in Morocco, and there are populations in Hawaii (where it was introduced in 1911) and Puerto Rico. Wild canaries are still fairly common, favouring mountains and woodlands, but adapting well to most environments. The total wild population is estimated at 110-160,000.


A flock of Canaries
The Canary Islands are named after their famous native bird

The Canary has been bred by humans for so long that pet birds are classed as a separate subspecies - Serinus canaria domesticus. No caged Starling, Linnet or Goldfinch (popular European pets at one time) could come near its appealing musical mixture of melody and energy. This popularity was soon bolstered by the fact that selective breeding produced many wonderful shapes, sizes and colour variations amongst pet Canary populations, from whites, oranges and pinks to the iconic yellow that lots of people automatically associate with the bird.

Wild Canaries

Wild Canaries
Wild Canaries are still fairly common

The bird is known by a number of alternative names, including the Atlantic, Island, Common or Wild Canary. It nests in trees and bushes, away from other Canaries. They are largely solitary outside the breeding season, too, but come together in flocks for feeding. They forage on the ground and in weeds and grasses, where their safety-in-numbers approach lessens the chance of being caught by predators.

Customer Images

Peeper, an American Singer Canary

Comments

Henry, 11 September 2020

after transporting a canary yesterday from a differentwhat do aviary he has one flight feather on each wing protruding what should i do


Ian, 17 May 2020

Correction : Canary Islands name comes from the latin Canis - Dog. The bird had nothing to do with the naming of the island.


Graeme, 9 September 2018

It is not true that that the Canary Islands are named after the bird. The name of the canary islands derives from the Latin for island of dogs. It can be assumed therefore that the name of the bird is actually derived from the name of the islands rather than the other way around.