Harman Patil (Editor)

Yellow billed cotinga

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Genus
  
Carpodectes

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Species

Family
  
Cotingidae

Scientific name
  
Carpodectes antoniae

Higher classification
  
Carpodectes

Order
  
Passerine

Yellow-billed cotinga osaconservationorgwpcontentuploads201106P10

Similar
  
Carpodectes, Turquoise cotinga, Snowy cotinga, Black‑tipped cotinga, Masked fruiteater

Creating sanctuary habitat for the yellow billed cotinga


The yellow-billed cotinga (Carpodectes antoniae) is a species of bird in the family Cotingidae. It is found near the coast in Costa Rica and the extreme western part of Panama. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests, subtropical or tropical mangrove forests, and subtropical or tropical moist shrubland. It is threatened by habitat destruction.

Contents

Yellow-billed cotinga Osas Yellowbilled Cotinga Osa Conservation

Description

Yellow-billed cotinga Identification Yellowbilled Cotinga Carpodectes antoniae

The yellow-billed cotinga grows to an adult length of about 8 inches (20 cm). The male has the crown of the head suffused with pearly-grey, but otherwise the plumage closely resembles the much more common snowy cotinga (Carpodectes nitidus), being pure white. However, this bird has a yellow beak, rather than the bluish-grey bill of the snowy cotinga. The female resembles the female snowy cotinga, with its pale brownish-grey upper parts, and greyish-white underparts; it also has a yellow beak.

Distribution and habitat

Yellow-billed cotinga Birdwatching Tours Panama Birding Tours Yellowbilled Cotinga

The yellow-billed cotinga is endemic to the Pacific coast of Costa Rica and the extreme west of Panama. It occurs in a number of small, separate enclaves, the most northerly of which is in Costa Rica at the mouth of the Tárcoles River and in the Carara National Park nearby. The largest populations are in the area of the Golfo Dulce and the Osa Peninsula, and the main nesting area is at the mouth of the Sierpe River. There are several other locations in Costa Rica where it occurs and it has been seen in Panama, but sightings there are sporadic. It mostly inhabits mangrove forests but is sometimes seen in scrubland and adjacent lowland forests, and occasionally in isolated trees in more open countryside.

Behaviour

Yellow-billed cotinga Yellowbilled Cotinga Carpodectes antoniae videos photos and

The behaviour of this bird has been little studied. The males (and sometimes the females) perch high in trees by the Sierpe River and fly back and forth low over the water. A swooping form of flight has been observed which is possibly a courtship display.

Status

Although no exact count has been made of these birds, it is estimated that there are between 150 and 700 mature individuals in total, and that the population is declining. The chief threat they face is the destruction of the mangrove forests in which they live for conversion of the land into shrimp ponds, pasture and rice cultivation. Inland from the mangroves, much of the lowland forest has been felled and the construction of roads and dykes has changed the hydrology of the area. For these reasons, the International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed the conservation status of this bird as "endangered".

Yellow-billed cotinga Photos of Yellowbilled Cotinga Carpodectes antoniae the

Yellow-billed cotinga

References

Yellow-billed cotinga Wikipedia