Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Cocoa thrush

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Passeriformes

Genus
  
Turdus

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Turdidae

Scientific name
  
Turdus fumigatus

Higher classification
  
True thrush

Cocoa thrush wwwhbwcomsitesdefaultfilesstylesibc1kpubl

Similar
  
True thrush, Bird, Thrush, Spectacled thrush, Hauxwell's thrush

The cocoa thrush (Turdus fumigatus) is a resident breeding bird in South America from eastern Colombia south and east to central and eastern Brazil, and on Trinidad and some of the Lesser Antilles.

Contents

Cocoa thrush Cocoa Thrush Turdus fumigatus videos photos and sound recordings

The habitat of this large thrush is dense forest. The nest is a lined bulky cup of twigs low in a tree or treefern. Two to three reddish-blotched greenish-blue eggs are laid and incubated by the female for about 13 days to hatching. The young then fledge in another 13–15 days.

Cocoa thrush Cocoa Thrush Turdus fumigatus Species Information

The cocoa thrush is 22–24 cm long. It is dark rufous brown above and paler rufous brown below. There are five poorly defined races, differing mainly in the brightness of the plumage. Sexes are similar, but young birds are duller, having the scalloped underparts common in immature thrushes.

Cocoa thrush ChocoStory The Chocolate Museum Cacao amp Co

The cocoa thrush mainly feeds on or near the ground on insects, especially ants, other invertebrates and some berries. It is a shy species, but on Trinidad it is much tamer, and will come to feeders. The song is a musical warble, and it also produces a variety of typical thrush chuck and chak calls.

Cocoa thrush More on Turdus fumigatus Cocoa Thrush

Sanha o do coqueiro thraupis palmarum sabi da mata turdus fumigatus cocoa thrush wildlife


Range

In South America, besides the Amazon Basin, the Guianas and the Guiana Shield, the cocoa thrush ranges into two areas.

A medium sized disjunct population lives on southeast coastal Brazil; the narrow coastal range is 300 km wide and extends from Alagoas state in the north to southern Rio de Janeiro state, about 2300 km. Another range for the species is in northeast Colombia and southwest Venezuela. It covers parts of the headwaters of the Caribbean-flowing Orinoco River drainage, and adjacent Amazonian headwaters to the Rio Negro flowing southeast into the Amazon's northwest quadrant. This Colombian-Venezuelan range extends to the coast, and is coastal along northern Venezuela, as it is an extension of the range from the Guianas, (western Guyana).

The cocoa thrush's range covers the downstream eastern half of the Amazon Basin; in the northeast Basin, it is in Pará and Amapá state with the Guianas. In the southeast Basin, it is in the Tapajos River and Xingu River drainages; also two thirds of the adjacent river system, the lower Araguaia–Tocantins River drainage.

References

Cocoa thrush Wikipedia