All known species of Darwin's Finches are found on the Galápagos islands. With the exception of one, the Cocos Finch, which is found on the Cocos Island.
Darwin's finches are not actually true finches. Darwin knew they weren't finches, but an ornithologist called Percy Lowe, later in 1936 incorrectly called them "Darwin's Finches" in a book, a term which unfortunately stuck.
yes
No i wouldn't suggest it the budgie will kill the canary
the large ground finches live in scalesia zone
Charles Darwin discover the finches in Galapagos in 1831. He noticed that the finches beaks were different compared to the finch's in Ecuador.
Well.. from my experiences with finches - they like holly tree's, and rhododendrons.
Mostly House finches. Hous Finches are usually the most seen around bird feedes but there are also, orange Finches
No, zebra finches can also be found in pet stores outside of Australia.
yes
evidence in real time - finches fossil evidence evidence now backed up by genetics geological evidence of strata not just fossils
maycomb
yes
Dig a hole live a hole
Finches live 15 to 20 years.
The example of peppered moths is not really different from Darwin's theory, it is the same concept. The only difference is that peppered moths live in the same habitat, where as Darwin's finches live in different habitats, which drove the evolution of their different beak shapes. The peppered moths have adapted to blend into their environment so they're not as easily caught.
No i wouldn't suggest it the budgie will kill the canary
the large ground finches live in scalesia zone
In Australia. (i think i spelled it wrong!)