Red-necked aracari
The red-necked aracari or red-necked araçari is a near-passerine bird in the toucan family Ramphastidae. It is found in Bolivia and Brazil.
Taxonomy and systematics
The International Ornithological Committee, the Clements taxonomy, and the South American Classification Committee of the American Ornithological Society recognize three subspecies of red-necked aracari:- P. b. sturmii - Natterer, 1843
- P. b. reichenowi - Snethlage, E, 1907
- The nominate P. b. bitorquatus - Vigors, 1826
This article follows the IOC et al. three-subspecies model.
Description
The red-necked aracari is about long and weighs. The bill of the nominate subspecies has a yellow to greenish white maxilla with black and white along the edge that resembles teeth. The mandible has a white base that angles under the black of the rest of the mandible. Adult males have a blackish crown and dark brown face, chin, and throat. Their eye is surrounded by bare blue to greenish gray skin. Their nape and breast are red; yellow and black bands separate the latter from the throat. The rest of their upperparts are dark green and their underparts are yellow below the breast. Adult females have a browner crown, a lighter face and throat, and a narrower yellow band above the breast than males. Immatures are duller and browner than adults and are orange where adults are red.Subspecies P. b. reichenowi is similar to the nominate but has no yellow band above the breast and less extensive red on the breast. Its bill has a jagged appearance near the base of the mandible where the black and white meet. P. b. sturmii is larger than the nominate and has a wider yellow band above the red breast. The "teeth" on the maxilla are less apparent and the mandible is all black except for an orange-yellow band at its base and a pale tip.
Distribution and habitat
The subspecies of red-necked aracari are found thus:- P. b. sturmii, north-central Brazil south of the Amazon River between the Rio Madeira and Rio Tapajós, south from there to Rondônia state and eastern Bolivia, and east to near the Rio Xingu
- P. b. reichenowi, Brazil south of the Amazon between the Rio Tapajós and Rio Tocantins and south from there to northern Mato Grosso
- P. b. bitorquatus, northeastern Brazil south of the Amazon from the Rio Tocantins east to the Atlantic coast in Maranhão state.