Wild Birds

Small Blue Birds

Small Blue Birds found in the Americas - Species Identification Resource

This page features small birds with either entirely blue plumages or where blue/purplish blue is a major plumage detail.

 

Small Blue Birds in America

Visitors submit regularly questions about “small blue birds” or “small blue finches” that they encountered and would like to have identified.

Small Blue Birds Perched on the Woods
Small Blue Birds Perched on the Woods

This resource was created to facilitate the identification of species they might have seen. Links to the full species pages are available. Basic information about their natural range is provided as well, as this is a key aspect of bird identification.


Blue Jays – Not featured on this page, since this page is only for small birds.

Blue Hummingbirds – listed on a separate page to keep this page to a manageable size


Mountain Bluebird (Sialia currucoides)

  • Range: Canada south to northern parts of Mexico

Western Bluebird (Sialia mexicana)

  • Range: Western North America, but not desert areas

Eastern Bluebird (Sialia sialis)

  • Range: North America, east of the Rockies, southern Canada to the Gulf States, and southeastern Arizona to Nicaragua.

Blue Grosbeaks (Passerina caerulea) – medium-sized, colorful songbirds

  • Range: North and Central America.

Blue Finches (Porphyrospiza caerulescens) – also known as Yellow-billed Blue Finches

  • Range: The Blue Finches are native to Brazil and Bolivia. They are rare and endangered.

Indigo Bunting (Passerina cyanea) – also known as Indigo Bird or Indigo Painted Finch

  • Range: Eastern North America and the southwest United States. Isolated populations have been reported in the western United States. Winter from southern Florida south to the Caribbean, Central America, and northern South America

Opal-rumped Tanager (Tangara velia)

  • Range: South America – in the Amazon and Atlantic Forest

Blue-and-yellow Tanager (Thraupis bonariensis)

  • Range: South America: Argentina, Uruguay, Brazil, Paraguay, Bolivia, extreme northern border Chile, and Andean Peru and Ecuador.

Fawn-breasted Tanager (Pipraeidea melanoma)

  • Range: South Brazil, Paraguay, Uruguay, Northern Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela.

Blue-capped Tanager (Thraupis cyanocephala)

  • Range: South America: Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, Trinidad and Tobago, and Venezuela

Blue-grey Tanager Perched on a Branch
Blue-grey Tanager Perched on a Branch

Blue-grey Tanager (Thraupis episcopus)

  • Range: Mexico south into South America, to northeast Bolivia and northern Brazil. Introduced to Lima, Peru.

Sayaca Tanager (Thraupis sayaca)

  • Range: Northeastern, central, and southeastern Brazil, and Bolivia, Paraguay, Uruguay, and northeast Argentina.

Opal-crowned Tanager (Tangara callophrys)

  • Range: Found in South America, in the eastern Andes drainages to the western Amazon Basin in southeastern Colombia, eastern Ecuador, and Peru and a border region of extreme northwestern Bolivia, and Amazonian Brazil. A disjunct population exists 100 km west in southern Colombia.

Turquoise Tanager (Tangara mexicana)

  • Range: South America – within the Amazon Basin to Colombia, Venezuela, the Guianas, and Bolivia. Also common on the island of Trinidad and in the Atlantic Forest of eastern Brazil, from Bahia to Rio de Janeiro.

Seven-colored Tanagers (Tangara fastuosa) – Rare songbirds

  • Range: Brazil, South America

Swallow Tanager (Tersina viridis)

  • Range: Panama (Central America) south to Northern Argentina in South America.

Blue-necked Tanager (Tangara cyanicollis)

  • Range: South America: Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela

Black-capped Tanager (Tangara heinei)

  • Range: South America; Colombia, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela.

Paradise Tanager (Tangara chilensis)

  • Range: Fairly widespread in the South American countries of Venezuela, Peru, Colombia, and Brazil, as well as the upper parts of the Amazon

Green-headed Tanager (Tangara seledon)

  • Range: South America – south-eastern Brazil, far eastern Paraguay and far north-eastern Argentina (Misiones only)

Golden-naped Tanager (Tangara ruficervix)

  • Range: South America: Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador and Peru.

Bay-headed Tanagers (Tangara gyrola)

  • Range: Central America – namely Costa Rica, Panama – and in South America (south to Ecuador, Bolivia, and southern Brazil), as well as on Trinidad (the southernmost island in the Caribbean).
Honeycreeper on a Tree Branch
Honeycreeper on a Tree Branch

Green Honeycreeper (Chlorophanes spiza)

  • Range: Southern Mexico south to Brazil

Blue Dacnis or Turquoise Honeycreepers (Dacnis cayana)

  • Range: Central America – Nicaragua to Panama, on Trinidad – as well as in South America south to Bolivia and northern Argentina.

Red-legged Honeycreeper (Cyanerpes cyaneus)

  • Range: Southern Mexico south to Peru, Bolivia, and central Brazil, and on Cuba, Trinidad and Tobago.

Purple Honeycreeper (Cyanerpes caeruleus)

  • Range: South America: Colombia and Venezuela south to Brazil, and on Trinidad. May have been introduced to Tobago.

Shining Honeycreeper (Cyanerpes lucidus)

  • Range: From southern Mexico to northwest Colombia.

Cordon-bleu Finches

  • Natural Range: Even though they occur naturally only in East Africa, these birds are very popular and common in the American pet / cage trade. Feral populations or escapees are likely to exist in temperate climates
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Gordon Ramel

Gordon is an ecologist with two degrees from Exeter University. He's also a teacher, a poet and the owner of 1,152 books. Oh - and he wrote this website.

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