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San Andres vireo

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Family
  
Vireonidae

Scientific name
  
Vireo caribaeus

Higher classification
  
Vireo

Order
  
Passerine

Subphylum
  
Vertebrata

Genus
  
Vireo

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Species

San Andres vireo cdn2arkiveorgmediaE7E7FD6F433A7D412CA6651

Similar
  
Vireo, Bird, Jamaican vireo, Blue Mountain vireo, Slaty vireo

Endemic san andres vireo vireo caribaeus isla de san andres y providencia


The San Andres vireo or St. Andrew vireo (Vireo caribaeus) is a threatened species of vireo endemic to the Colombian island of San Andrés in the Caribbean, located off the east coast of Nicaragua. Due to habitat loss from the ever expanding population on these small islands, the species has now become limited to a few localities on the southern half of the island, but it is still common in some of these areas. It is found in most habitat types on the island.

Contents

Endemic san andres vireo vireo caribaeus st andrew vireo isla de san andres


Description

San Andres vireo Banding On San Andres Island Are They quotOurquot Birds Or quotTheirsquot

It is a small bird, 12.5 cm in length. It is olive-green above and whitish or pale yellow below. It has two white bars on the wing, pale edges to the flight-feathers and a pale yellow stripe between the bill and eye. The eye is grey-brown. It has several songs and calls, producing a one-syllable chattering, a repeated two-syllable song and a three-syllable song.

It is very similar to the mangrove vireo (V. pallens) and Jamaican vireo (V. modestus). It has a slightly thinner and darker bill than the mangrove vireo. Its bill is slightly longer and darker than that of the Jamaican vireo which also differs in having a whitish eye and fainter stripe between the bill and eye.

Distribution and habitat

San Andres vireo San Andres vireo videos photos and facts Vireo caribaeus ARKive

It is restricted to the islands of St. Andrew (or San Andrés) and Providencia in the south-west Caribbean which belong to Colombia but is closer to Nicaragua. It occurs in a variety of habitats including woodland, cocoa plantations, scrubby pastures and mangrove swamps. It prefers vegetation with a dense understorey. It is most common in the less urbanized south of the island. The population has been estimated at between 8,200 and 14,000 individuals.

San Andres vireo San Andres vireo photo Vireo caribaeus G100520 ARKive

The bird has a very small range and may be vulnerable to the effects of hurricanes. It is threatened by habitat loss as the island's population increases. However, it is tolerant of habitat degradation and is still one of the island's commonest birds. It is classified as Vulnerable by BirdLife International.

Behaviour

San Andres vireo Jan Axel39s Blog Bird of the Month San Andres Vireo

It feeds by gleaning caterpillars and other arthropods from vegetation. The breeding territory covers about 0.5 hectares and nesting has been recorded in June. The nest is built on or hanging from a branch in bushes or mangroves. Two lightly spotted eggs are laid.

References

San Andres vireo Wikipedia