Barred Forest Falcon

Barred Forest Falcon
Barred Forest Falcon
In São Paulo, Brazil
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Falconiformes
Family: Falconidae
Genus: Micrastur
Species: M. ruficollis
Binomial name
Micrastur ruficollis
(Vieillot, 1817)

The Barred Forest Falcon (Micrastur ruficollis) is a species of bird of prey in the Falconidae family which includes the falcons, caracaras, and their relatives. It occurs throughout most of tropical and subtropical Latin America, except the arid Pacific coast in South America, northern and western Mexico, and the Antilles.

Contents

Description

Adults of most subspecies are typically dark slate grey above; the tail tipped with white and having three to six narrow white bars.[1] The throat is pale grey, shading to the darker slate of the crown. The rest of his under parts, including the under-wing coverts are white, finely and clearly barred with black or dark grey. The upper breast is a darker grey. The primary remiges are dark brownish-grey with off-white bars on the inner webs. One subspecies, zonothorax from the East Andean foothills, is polymorphic (at least in the northern part of its range), and also occurs in a brown morph, where most of the upperparts, head and chest are brown or rufous instead of grey.[2] The nominate subspecies, which is found from south-eastern Brazil south to north-eastern Argentina and west to Paraguay, appears to only occur in the rufous-brown morphotype, as also suggested by its scientific name, ruficollis.

The eyes are cream to light orange brown; the bill black, becoming yellow at base of the lower mandible; the cere, lores, and orbit are yellow, and the legs are orange-yellow.

Ecology

Barred Forest Falcons mainly utilize mature upland forest. In Central America, the species is generally restricted to mature tropical forests. In South America, however, the Barred Forest Falcon lives in other kinds of forests and woodland, even relatively arid. For example, in Amazonia it occurs most often in secondary forests, gallery forests, tidal swamp forests, semi-deciduous forests and forest edges. In Acre, Brazil, the Barred Forest Falcon is reported to prefer disturbed forest types, both natural secondary and man made, including bamboo and more open seasonally drier forest on rocky outcrops. But generally it is a bird that avoids habitat when human influence is too pronounced, and will require primary or mature secondary forest to persist in any location.[3] It is not commonly seen, but based on voice, it appears to be uncommon to fairly common throughout a large part of its range. This combined with its large range has led to it being classified as a species of Least Concern by the IUCN.[4]

It is rare on the eastern slope of the Colombian Cordillera Oriental, where it was recorded in primary forest and old secondary forest, in a narrow altitude band between 3,300-4,900 ft (1,000-1,500 m) ASL, and first encountered in the Serranía de las Quinchas only in 2000/2001.[3] Second-growth forest in these mountains is dominated by trees like Melastomaceae (e.g. Miconia and Tibouchina) and trees are generally overgrown with epiphytes and hemiepiphytes like Coussapoa (Urticaceae).[5]

This species feed primarily upon small birds, mammals (mainly rodents and marsupials such as the Brazilian Slender Opossum, Marmosops paulensis[6]) and squamates. Like Accipiter hawks, they often hunt prey by sitting quietly on tree branches and waiting for their victims to appear. When the latter arrive, the forest-falcons quickly ambush them, attempting to catch them with a brief, flying pursuit. However, forest-falcons also use other techniques to hunt prey, such as chasing prey on foot, following army ant swarms, and acoustical luring of birds, by means of a "facial disc"[verification needed]. The species has also been recorded to snatch animals from traps or cages, for example during mark-recapture studies.[6]

Forest-falcons do not build a nest, but lay their two or three white eggs in cavities in trees. Laying occurs mainly late in the dry season, with hatching taking place at the onset of the rainy season, a time of increasing prey abundance. Eggs hatch 33–35 days after being laid, and nestlings fledge 35–44 days after hatching. Radio-tagged fledglings dispersed from their parents' territories within four to seven weeks after fledging, presumably achieving independence at that time. Nesting territories were occupied year after year; there is also high mate fidelity.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Howell & Webb (1995)
  2. ^ Restall et al. (2006)
  3. ^ a b Laverde-R. et al. (2005)
  4. ^ BLI (2004)
  5. ^ Salaman et al. (2002)
  6. ^ a b Olmos et al. (2006)

References

  • BirdLife International (BLI) (2004). Micrastur ruficollis. 2006. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. www.iucnredlist.org. Retrieved on 24 July 2007.
  • Howell, S.N.G.; & Webb, S. (1995): A Guide to the Birds of Mexico and Northern Central America. Oxford University Press, New York. ISBN 0-19-854013-2
  • Laverde-R., Oscar; Stiles, F. Gary & Múnera-R., Claudia (2005): Nuevos registros e inventario de la avifauna de la Serranía de las Quinchas, un área importante para la conservación de las aves (AICA) en Colombia [New records and updated inventory of the avifauna of the Serranía de las Quinchas, an important bird area (IBA) in Colombia]. Caldasia 27(2): 247-265 [Spanish with English abstract]. PDF fulltext
  • Olmos, Fábio; Pacheco, José Fernando & Silveira, Luís Fábio (2006): Notas sobre aves de rapina (Cathartidae, Acciptridae e Falconidae) brasileiras [Notes on Brazilian birds of prey]. Revista Brasileira de Ornitologia 14(4): 401-404 [Portuguese with English abstract]. PDF fulltext
  • Restall, R. L.; Rodner, C. & Lentino, M.. (2006): Birds of Northern South America. Christopher Helm, London. ISBN 0-7136-7243-9 (vol. 1). ISBN 0-7136-7242-0 (vol. 2).
  • Salaman, Paul G.W.; Stiles, F. Gary; Bohórquez, Clara Isabel; Álvarez-R., Mauricio; Umaña, Ana María; Donegan, Thomas M. & Cuervo, Andrés M. (2002): New and noteworthy bird records from the east slope of the andes of Colombia. Caldasia 24(1): 157-189. PDF fulltext

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