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Sunday, 30 May 2021

THE GREAT POT00 IN COSTA RICA

There is very little known about the life history and behavior of the Great Potoo (Nyctibius grandis). Perhaps this species generally roosts in very tall trees in tropical forests. It’s coloration-white with brown mottling-matches closely that of the limbs on which it rests. The hunting as well as the roosting habits of N. grandis observations made above the canopy of a primary lowland wet forest at Finca La Selva (a research station of the Organization for Tropical Studies), near Puerto Viejo, Heredia Province, on the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica.

Great Potoo first observation in 1978 from a platform where built 33 m up in a Monkey-pot tree (Lecythis costaricensis). It sat on a limb of a leafless, 46 m tall Hymenolobium sp. (Leguminosae) tree some 80 m away, within unbroken forest in the south corner of Washington Plot (a permanent research site at La Selva).

The bird was very difficult to distinguish, for it closely resembled the stump of a branch. This was the first time a Great Potoo had been seen in the area. The species has not been previously reported with certainty from Costa Rica, although expected, for it was known to occur in regions to the north and south.

The very few records from the north have come from Nicaragua, Guatemala and a sighting, but no specimens, from Honduras. On the afternoon the bird perched on the same limb as before at my level. It stood within a small area of bare bark, devoid of the usual encrusting lichens, suggesting that this was a regular perch site.

Over the next two months I visited the tree at varying intervals and nearly always found the bird there. I photographed it repeatedly, confirming the identification, and noted some of its behavior. When the potoo was not disturbed, it sat upright, facing forward, eyes closed, and with its head feathers erect so that it had an owl-like appearance.

My presence several meters away did not seem to disturb the bird. When I made abrupt moves that shook the tree or when I called out, the potoo apparently became alarmed and immediately raised its head until it faced vertically, with eyes closed and head feathers depressed. In this position it resembled even more closely a part of the branch. Often, in either position, the mouth was held partially open. The bird was probably panting as it always sat in full sun.

The mouth lining was a dull red. Occasionally, for no apparent reason, the potoo shifted its body to a horizontal orientation; its head however, remained facing out, never down. At other times it stretched its wings or turned its head and looked around. The bird perched on lateral limbs of the tree crown that ranged in diameter from about 15 cm to about 35 cm. It stayed within regions from one-half to two-thirds of the distance from the trunk to the periphery of the crown.

During the period of my observations, the Hymenolobium tree was in its reproductive phase. By the last two weeks of August, the fruit had become attractive to other birds, especially the Red-lored Parrot (Amazona uutumnulis). These parrots came to the tree in groups of up to twenty and foraged noisily. On 23 August, after several days of this activity, I searched for the potoo but it was not in the Hymenolobium.

On 1 September the potoo was in the tree again. At around 16:OO several Red-lored Parrots flew into the tree and began walking about the limbs looking for fruit. One parrot came to within a meter of the potoo, and the latter appeared to become agitated. It looked repeatedly toward the parrots as it made uncharacteristically quick movements and finally assumed its vertical alarm posture.

The bird was not in the tree the next day and it still had not returned by 15 September, when I left La Selva. The coloration of the potoo matches closely that of the lichen-covered limbs of Hymenolobium sp., and these trees, along with others that have similarly colored limbs, could be preferred perches. The species is probably more numerous than is generally realized but its cryptic coloring and habits make it difficult to find. Further inspection of canopy tree crowns may corroborate these conclusions.

Reference - DONALD R. PERRY

  

Monday, 3 May 2021

Short-tailed paradigalla "Paradigalla brevicauda"

 Description

This is a species of bird of paradise. Short-tailed paradigalla is endemic to Papua New Guinea highland forest. It is the least concern on the ICUN red list of threatened species.  This medium size species considered to breed polygynously.

 

SUBFAMILY

Paradisaeinae

 

TAXONOMY

Paradigalla brevicauda Rothschild and Hartert, 1911, Mount

Goliath, central Dutch New Guinea.

 

OTHER COMMON NAMES

English: Short-tailed wattled bird of paradise; French: Paradisier à queue courte; German: Langschwanz-Paradigalla; Spanish: Paradigalla de Cola Corta.

 

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

9.0 in (23 cm); female 0.40.38 (155170 g), male 0.350.41 lb (160184 g). Head, upperparts, and underparts a velvety black. Yellowish green crown to nape and small, light blue wattle at the mandible base. Conspicuous bright yellow fore face. Blackish bill and legs.

 

DISTRIBUTION

Western and central ranges of New Guinea mainland from the Weyland Mountains eastward to the Bismark Range at altitudes of 4,5908,460 ft (1,4002,580 m). Maybe on the Kratke Range, Papua New Guinea, but unrecorded to date.

 

HABITAT

Midmontane forests, including beech, forest/garden edges, secondary growth.

 

BEHAVIOR

Birds give a rising bell-like zheee call at about 490 ft (150 m) intervals in moss forest, suggestive of dispersed solitary males advertising from song posts. In-flight, wings make an audible rattling or rustling.

 

FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET

Omnivorous, predominantly frugivorous, but little known. Birds acrobatically cling to tree boughs and trunks to tear and probe into epiphytic plant growth for invertebrates and small vertebrates. Nestlings fed a large proportion (65%) of animals, including earthworms, insect larvae, crickets, beetles, mantids, katydids, spiders, frogs, and skinks.

 

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY

Polygynous, with presumed promiscuous males and exclusively female nest attendance. Breeding on the Tari Valley slopes recorded in all months except March and November. Nest is a substantial, deep, open cup and the clutch is one egg. Incubation lasts more than 19 days and a known nestling period was 25 days.

 

CONSERVATION STATUS

Not threatened.