- Black-faced Grosbeak
Taxobox
name = Black-faced Grosbeak
status = LC
status_system = iucn3.1
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Chordata
classis =Aves
ordo =Passeriformes
familia =Cardinalidae
genus = "Caryothraustes "
species = "C. poliogaster"
binomial = "Caryothraustes poliogaster"
binomial_authority = (Du Bus de Gisignies, 1847)The Black-faced Grosbeak, "Caryothraustes poliogaster", is a large
seed -eatingbird in the cardinal family, which is a resident breeding species from southeasternMexico to easternPanama .The adult Black-faced Grosbeak is 16.5 cm long, weighs 36 g, and has a heavy, mainly black, bill. It has a black face, yellow head, neck and breast, and olive back, wings and tail. The rump and belly are grey. Immatures are duller and have duskier face markings.
The vocalisations include sharp "chip" or "tweet" calls, buzzes and whistles, and the song is a musical whistled "cher chi weet, cher chir weet, cher chi chuweet".
The Black-faced Grosbeak forages in shrubs or trees for
beetle s,caterpillar s and otherinsect s, and also eats fruit such as those ofGumbo-limbo Foster (2007)] ("Bursera simaruba"),seed s, andnectar taken from flowers or epiphyte bracts. It forms noisy flocks of up to 20 birds, and is often inmixed-species feeding flock s withhoneycreeper s and othertanager s as well asNew World warbler s. It appears to generally try to avoid human-altered habitat though it can be sometimes found in heavily degraded former subtropical or tropical forest [BirdLife International (2004)] .This species breeds in the
Caribbean lowlands and foothills from sea level to about 1000m altitude, and is found in the canopy and middle levels of dense wet forests, tall second growth, and semi-open habitats such as woodland edge and clearings. The nest is a bowl constructed frombromeliad leaves and otherepiphyte s 3-6 m high in a small tree or palm. The female lays three brown-spotted gey-white eggs between April and June.Footnotes
References
*|year=2004|id=54069|title=Caryothraustes poliogaster|downloaded=
10 May 2006 Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
* (2007): The potential of fruiting trees to enhance converted habitats for migrating birds in southern Mexico. "Bird Conservation International" 17(1): 45-61. doi|10.1017/S0959270906000554 [http://journals.cambridge.org/production/action/cjoGetFulltext?fulltextid=936412 PDF fulltext]
* (1989): "A guide to the birds of Costa Rica". Comistock, Ithaca. ISBN 0-8014-9600-4
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