Cissa (bird)


Cissa is a genus of relatively short-tailed magpies, sometimes known as hunting cissas, that reside in the forests of tropical and subtropical southeast Asia and adjacent regions. The four species are quite similar with bright red bills, primarily green plumage, black mask, and rufous wings.
Due to a low-carotenoid diet they often appear blue or turquoise in captivity; the structural color of their feathers. They are carnivorous, and mainly feed on arthropods and small vertebrates.

Taxonomy

The genus was introduced by the German zoologist Friedrich Boie in 1826 with the common green magpie as the type species. The name Cissa is from the Ancient Greek kissa meaning a "jay" or "magpie".
The genus Cissa contains four species:
Species of CissaSpecies of CissaSpecies of CissaSpecies of Cissa
Common and binomial namesImageDescriptionRange
Common green magpie
Common green magpies have long tail feathers, striped black and white tertiaries, and a subtle yellow capLower Himalayas to mainland southeast Asia, as well as Borneo and Sumatra
Indochinese green magpie
Unique to this genus, indochinese green magpies have a yellow underbellyMainland southeast Asia and adjacent parts of China
Javan green magpie
Javan green magpies have short tails and white tertiary feathersJava
Bornean green magpie
Bornean green magpies look much like the other species in this genus but have white irisesBorneo