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Red legged honeycreeper

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Thraupidae

Scientific name
  
Cyanerpes cyaneus

Higher classification
  
Honeycreeper

Order
  
Passeriformes

Genus
  
Cyanerpes

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Species


Similar
  
Honeycreeper, Bird, Tanager, Green honeycreeper, Shining honeycreeper

The red-legged honeycreeper (Cyanerpes cyaneus) is a small songbird species in the tanager family (Thraupidae). It is found in the tropical New World from southern Mexico south to Peru, Bolivia and central Brazil, Trinidad and Tobago, and on Cuba, where possibly introduced.

Contents

Red-legged honeycreeper Redlegged Honeycreeper Cyanerpes cyaneus videos photos and sound

Red legged honeycreeper


Description

Red-legged honeycreeper httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The red-legged honeycreeper is on average 12.2 cm (4.8 in) long, weighs 14 g (0.49 oz) and has a medium-long black, slightly decurved, bill. The male is violet-blue with black wings, tail and back, and bright red legs. The crown of its head is turquoise, and the underwing, visible only in flight, is lemon yellow. After the breeding season, the male moults into an eclipse plumage, mainly greenish with black wings.

Females and immatures are mainly green, with paler, faintly streaked underparts. The legs are red-brown in the female, and brown in young birds.

The call of red-legged honeycreeper is a thin, high-pitched tsip.

Red-legged honeycreeper Redlegged Honeycreeper

Several subspecies are known. Differences are generally slight, with the Tobago race C. c. tobagensis being slightly larger than the mainland forms for example.

Red-legged honeycreeper Redlegged Honeycreeper mal Why Evolution Is True

The purplish honeycreeper (Chlorophanes purpurascens), a bird from Venezuela known only from the type specimen, is considered to be an intergeneric hybrid between the green honeycreeper and either the red-legged honeycreeper or the blue dacnis.

Ecology

This is a species of forest edge, open woodland, and cocoa and citrus plantations. The red-legged honeycreeper is often found in small groups. It feeds on insects and some fruit and nectar. It responds readily to the (easily imitated) call of the ferruginous pygmy owl (Glaucidium brasilianum).

The female red-legged honeycreeper builds a small cup nest in a tree, and incubates the clutch of two brown-blotched white eggs for 12–13 days, with a further 14 days to fledging.

A specimen studied in the Parque Nacional de La Macarena of Colombia was found to be free of blood parasites.

Common and widespread, the red-legged honeycreeper is not considered a threatened species by the IUCN.

References

Red-legged honeycreeper Wikipedia


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