White-tailed Trogon (Trogon viridis)

White-tailed Trogon

[order] TROGONIFORMES | [family] Trogonidae | [latin] Trogon viridis | [authority] Linnaeus, 1766 | [UK] White-tailed Trogon | [FR] Trogon vert | [DE] Weissschwanz-Trogon | [ES] Trogon Coliblanco | [NL] Witstaarttrogon

Subspecies

Genus Species subspecies Region Range
Trogon chionurus LA Panama to w Ecuador

Genus

The Neotropical Trogoninae, containing four genera, Trogon, Priotelus, Pharomachrus and Eupilotis. The two Caribbean species of Priotelus were formerly different ones (Temnotrogon on Hispaniola), and are extremely ancient. The two quetzal genera, Pharomachrus and Eupilotis are possibly derived from the final and most numerous genus of trogons in the Neotropics, Trogon. A 2008 study of the genetics of Trogon suggested the genus originated in Central America and radiated into South America after the formation of the Isthmus of Panama (as part of the Great American Interchange), thus making trogons relatively recent arrivals in South America. Within the genus Trogon, a division of species that coincides with female plumage type is well supported. Females with brown breasts and heads characterize one clade (including T. rufus), whereas females in the other clade (including T. comptus) have gray breasts and heads. Females of T. rufus and T. mexicanus both have brown heads. Male plumage does not appear to be informative at this level; species with red or yellow underparts are interspersed in both clades. They have large eyes, stout hooked bills, short wings, and long, squared-off, strongly graduated tails; black and white tail-feather markings form distinctive patterns on the underside. Males have richly colored metallic plumage, metallic on the upperparts.[1] Although many have brightly coloured bare eye-rings, they lack the colorful patches of bare facial skin in their African counterparts, Apaloderma.[2] Females and young are duller and sometimes hard to identify in the field

Physical charateristics

The head and upper breast of the male are blue and the back is green, becoming bluer on the rump. The lower underparts are golden yellow. The undertail has a black center, broadly edged with white, and the wings are black, vermiculated with white. The female White-tailed Trogon has a brown-grey back, head and breast.

Listen to the sound of White-tailed Trogon

[audio:http://www.planetofbirds.com/MASTER/TROGONIFORMES/Trogonidae/sounds/White-tailed Trogon.mp3]

Copyright remark: Most sounds derived from xeno-canto


wingspan min.: 0 cm wingspan max.: 0 cm
size min.: 25 cm size max.: 28 cm
incubation min.: 0 days incubation max.: 0 days
fledging min.: 0 days fledging max.: 0 days
broods: 1   eggs min.: 2  
      eggs max.: 3  

Range

South America : Amazonia, Southeast Brazil

Habitat

It is found in the canopy and sub-canopy of forest and forest edges, humid lowland and foothill forest. Also in plantations and white sandy open forest.

Reproduction

Builds a nest in tree termite hills or holes in trees about 10-20 meters up. Clutch size is 2-3 eggs, no further data.

Feeding habits

Diet consists of berries, fruits and also insects like ants and anthropods eaten in the higher strata of trees by gleaning.

Video White-tailed Trogon

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fe8FI7aWpFk

copyright: J. del Hoyo


Conservation

This species has an extremely large range, and hence does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the range size criterion (Extent of Occurrence <20,000 km2 combined with a declining or fluctuating range size, habitat extent/quality, or population size and a small number of locations or severe fragmentation). The population trend appears to be stable, and hence the species does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population trend criterion (>30% decline over ten years or three generations). The population size has not been quantified, but it is not believed to approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population size criterion (<10,000 mature individuals with a continuing decline estimated to be >10% in ten years or three generations, or with a specified population structure). For these reasons the species is evaluated as Least Concern.
It occurs from Panama south to southern Brazil, and on Trinidad.
White-tailed Trogon status Least Concern

Migration

Sedentary but not well documented.

Distribution map

White-tailed Trogon distribution range map

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