Chestnut-headed chachalaca


The chestnut-headed chachalaca is a bird in the family Cracidae, the chachalacas, guans, and curassows. It is endemic to Brazil.

Taxonomy and systematics

What is now the chestnut-headed chachalaca was previously a subspecies of what was then called variable chachalaca. renamed O. motmot "little chachalaca" but the American Ornithological Society It is monotypic.

Description

The chestnut-headed chachalaca is long and weighs. It has a reddish-chestnut head, grayish brown upperparts, grayish underparts, and dark brown primary flight feathers.

Distribution and habitat

The chestnut-headed chachalaca is found only in north-central Brazil, south of the Amazon River between rio Tapajós in Pará state and rio Araguaia in Tocantins state. Though its habitat has not been well studied, it is believed to be similar to that of the little chachalaca: landscapes such as dense secondary forest and the undergrowth along rivers, in clearings, and abandoned pastures. It probably shuns the interior of dense forest.

Behavior

Feeding

The chestnut-headed chachalaca's feeding behavior and diet are assumed to be the same as those of little chachalaca. That species forages in trees or on the ground, usually in pairs or small flocks. Its primary diet is berries and fruits although it also eats flowers and leaves.

Breeding

No information has been published about the chestnut-headed chachalaca's breeding phenology.

Vocalization

The chestnut-headed chachalaca's song is "a loud, rollicking duet, a repeated 'WATCH-a-lak', which is mainly given at dawn and dusk" and is very similar to that of the little chachalaca though slower.

Status

The IUCN has not assessed the chestnut-headed chachalaca. It is considered rather common in parts of its range and occurs in some protected areas.