Puneet Varma (Editor)

Capitonidae

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Scientific name
  
Capitonidae

Higher classification
  
Ramphastides

Order
  
Piciformes

Infraorder
  
Ramphastides

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Family

Capitonidae creagrushomemontereybaycombfowbarbetsBarbScB

Similar
  
Bird, Piciformes, Lybiidae, Jacamar, Puffbird

American barbets, family Capitonidae, are near passerine birds of the order Piciformes which inhabit humid forests in Central and South America. They are closely related to the toucans.

Contents

The American barbets are plump birds, with short necks and large heads. They get their name from the bristles which fringe their heavy bills. Most species are brightly coloured and live in tropical forest.

Capitonidae marshallcapitonidae mmslouis

American barbets are mostly arboreal birds which nest in tree holes dug by breeding pairs, laying 2–4 eggs. They eat fruit and insects. These birds do not migrate.

Capitonidae African barbet family Capitonidae

Ecology

While most American barbet species inhabit lowland forest, some range into montane and temperate forests as well. Most are restricted to habitats containing trees with dead wood, which are used for nesting.

Capitonidae Barbets of Singapore Bird Ecology Study Group

The diet of barbets is mixed, with fruit being the dominant part of the diet. Small prey items are also taken, especially when nesting. Barbets are capable of shifting their diet quickly in the face of changes in food availability: Numerous species of fruiting tree and bush are visited; an individual barbet may feed on as many as 60 different species in its range. They will also visit plantations and take cultivated fruit and vegetables. Fruit is eaten whole and indigestible material such as seed pits regurgitated later (often before singing). Regurgitation does not usually happen in the nest (as happens with toucans). Like their relatives, American barbets are thought to be important agents in seed dispersal in tropical forests.

Capitonidae Capitonidae Wikipedia la enciclopedia libre

As well as taking fruit, they also take arthropod prey, gleaned from the branches and trunks of trees. A wide range of insects are taken, including ants, beetles and moths. Scorpions and centipedes are also taken, and a few species will take small vertebrates such as frogs.

Relationship with humans

American barbets have little impact on humans. The loss of forest can have a deleterious effect on barbet species dependent on old growth, to the benefit of species that favour more disturbed or open habitat.

Three species of American barbets are listed as threatened by the IUCN: The white-mantled barbet of Colombia is listed as endangered and the five-coloured barbet as vulnerable, the two having a relatively small range threatened by deforestation for the timber industry and to create space for agriculture (including coca and marijuana) and livestock, and mining. The quite recently discovered scarlet-banded barbet of Peru is considered vulnerable due to its small population size (estimated at under a thousand birds) although its remote habitat is not immediately threatened.

Systematics, taxonomy, and evolution

Fossil American barbets have been found dating from the Miocene in Florida. It is widely agreed that the closest relatives of the barbets are the toucans, and that these two families are also closely related to the honeyguides and woodpeckers (with which they form the order Piciformes).

Formerly the barbets have been treated as one family. However, this has turned out to be paraphyletic with regard to toucans; thus only the American true barbets are retained in the Capitonidae. The African barbets (Lybiidae) and the Asian barbets (Megalaimidae) as well as the two toucan-barbets from the Americas (Semnornithidae) are currently split from this family. Alternatively, the toucans, which evolved from a common ancestor shared with the American barbets, might be included in the traditional all-encompassing barbet family. As they have evolved a suite of characteristics that are unique to themselves they are usually treated separately, and thus the barbets are split up according to the four lineages.

Species

FAMILY: CAPITONIDAE

  • Genus: Capito
  • Scarlet-crowned barbet, Capito aurovirens
  • Scarlet-banded barbet, Capito wallacei
  • Spot-crowned barbet, Capito maculicoronatus
  • Orange-fronted barbet, Capito squamatus
  • White-mantled barbet, Capito hypoleucus
  • Black-girdled barbet, Capito dayi
  • Five-coloured barbet, Capito quinticolor
  • Black-spotted barbet, Capito niger
  • Gilded barbet, Capito auratus
  • Brown-chested barbet, Capito brunneipectus
  • Sira barbet, Capito fitzpatricki
  • Genus: Eubucco
  • Lemon-throated barbet, Eubucco richardsoni
  • Red-headed barbet, Eubucco bourcierii
  • Scarlet-hooded barbet, Eubucco tucinkae
  • Versicoloured barbet, Eubucco versicolor
  • References

    Capitonidae Wikipedia


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