Vireo (genus)


Vireo is a genus of small passerine birds restricted to the New World. Vireos typically have dull greenish plumage, but some are brown or gray on the back and some have bright yellow underparts. They resemble wood warblers apart from their slightly larger size and heavier bills, which in most species have a very small hook at the tip. The legs are stout.
Most species fall into two plumage groups: one with wing bars and yellow or white eye rings, and one with unmarked wings and eye stripes; however, the Chocó vireo has both wing bars and eye stripes.
Sexes are alike in all species except for the black-capped vireo, in which the male's crown is black and the female's is gray.

Taxonomy

The genus Vireo was introduced in 1808 by the French ornithologist Louis Pierre Vieillot. The type species was subsequently designated as the white-eyed vireo by German ornithologist Hans Friedrich Gadow in 1883. The word vireo was used by Latin authors for a small, green, migratory bird, probably a Eurasian golden oriole, but a European greenfinch has also been suggested.

Feeding

All members of the genus mostly eat insects and other arthropods, but also eat some fruit. A common pattern is arthropods in summer and fruit in winter. Vireos take prey from leaves and branches and in midair, and the gray vireo takes 5% of its prey from the ground.

Range and territorial behavior

Most species are found in Central America and northern South America. Thirteen species occur farther north, in the United States, Canada, and Bermuda; of these, all but Hutton's vireo are migratory. Vireos seldom fly long distances except in migration.
The resident species occur in pairs or family groups that maintain territories all year. Most of the migrants defend winter territories against conspecifics. The exceptions are the complex comprising the red-eyed vireo, the yellow-green vireo, the black-whiskered vireo, and the Yucatan vireo, which winter in small, wandering flocks.

Voice and breeding

Males of most species are persistent singers. Songs are usually rather simple, ranging from monotonous, in some species of the Caribbean littoral and islands, to elaborate and pleasant to human ears in the Chocó vireo. Calls often include "scolding chatters and mews".
The species whose nests are known all build a cup-shaped nest that hangs from branches. Its outer layer is made of coarse leaf and bark strips or of moss, depending on the species; in either case, the material is bound with spider silk and ornamented with spider egg cases. The lining is made of fine grass stems neatly circling the cup. In most species, both sexes work on the nest, but the female adds the lining. In the red-eyed, black-whiskered, Yucatan, and Philadelphia vireos, the male does not help, instead singing and accompanying the female while she builds the nest. The female does most of the incubation, spelled by the male except in the red-eyed vireo complex.
The eggs are whitish; all but the black-capped and dwarf vireos have sparse, fine brown or red-brown spots at the wide end. Tropical species lay two, while temperate-zone species lay four or five. Incubation lasts 11 to 13 days, and the young fledge after the same amount of time. Both sexes feed the nestlings arthropods, and each fledgeling is fed by one parent or the other for as long as 20 days.

Species

The genus contains 34 species:
GroupImageScientific nameCommon nameDistribution
The "hypochryseus" groupGolden vireoVireo hypochryseusMexico
The "olivaceous" groupYellow-green vireoVireo flavoviridissouthern Texas, Mexico south to central Panama
The "olivaceous" groupRed-eyed vireoVireo olivaceusCanada and the eastern and northwestern United States, Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay and Bolivia
The "olivaceous" groupYucatan vireoVireo magisterBelize, Honduras, Mexico
The "olivaceous" groupBlack-whiskered vireoVireo altiloquussouthern Florida, USA, and the West Indies as far south as the offshore islands of Venezuela
The "olivaceous" groupChivi vireoVireo chivinortheastern Colombia, into Venezuela and the entirety of the Guianas into eastern Brazil
The "olivaceous" groupNoronha vireoVireo gracilirostrisFernando de Noronha, Brazil
The "gilvus" groupTepui vireoVireo sclateriwestern Guyana and northern Brazil
The "gilvus" groupPhiladelphia vireoVireo philadelphicusCanada to Central America
The "gilvus" groupWarbling vireoVireo gilvusAlaska to Mexico and the Florida Panhandle
The "gilvus" groupBrown-capped vireoVireo leucophrysSouthern Mexico south to northwestern Bolivia
The "eye-ringed" groupHutton's vireoVireo huttonisouthern British Columbia in Canada to central Guatemala in Central America
The "eye-ringed" groupGray vireoVireo viciniorsouthwestern United States and northern Baja California to western Texas
The "eye-ringed" groupYellow-throated vireoVireo flavifronssouthern United States, Mexico, the Caribbean, and Central America
The "eye-ringed" groupYellow-winged vireoVireo carmioliCosta Rica and western Panama
The "eye-ringed" groupChoco vireoVireo masteriwestern Colombia and north-west Ecuador
The "eye-ringed" groupBlue-headed vireoVireo solitariusCanada and northern United States
The "eye-ringed" groupCassin's vireoVireo cassiniisouthern British Columbia in Canada through the western coastal states of the United States.
The "eye-ringed" groupPlumbeous vireoVireo plumbeussoutheastern Montana and western South Dakota south to the Pacific coast of Mexico
The "eye-ringed" groupBlue Mountain vireoVireo osburniJamaica
The "eye-ringed" groupFlat-billed vireoVireo nanusHispaniola
The "eye-ringed" groupMangrove vireoVireo pallensBelize, Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, and Nicaragua
The "eye-ringed" groupProvidencia vireoVireo approximansIsla de Providencia
The "eye-ringed" groupCozumel vireoVireo bairdiMexico
The "eye-ringed" groupSan Andres vireoVireo caribaeusislands of St. Andrew and Providencia
The "eye-ringed" groupWhite-eyed vireoVireo griseuseastern United States from New England west to northern Missouri and south to Texas and Florida, and also in eastern Mexico, northern Central America, Cuba and the Bahamas
The "eye-ringed" groupThick-billed vireoVireo crassirostrisWest Indies in the Bahamas, Turks and Caicos Islands, Cayman Islands, Tortuga Island in Haiti and Cuba
The "eye-ringed" groupJamaican vireoVireo modestusJamaica
The "eye-ringed" groupCuban vireoVireo gundlachiiCuba
The "eye-ringed" groupBell's vireoVireo belliiWestern North America and Central America
The "eye-ringed" groupPuerto Rican vireoVireo latimeriPuerto Rico
The "eye-ringed" groupBlack-capped vireoVireo atricapillasouth from south-central Kansas through central Oklahoma and Texas to central Coahuila, Mexico
The "eye-ringed" groupDwarf vireoVireo nelsoniMexico
The "eye-ringed" groupSlaty vireoVireo brevipennissouthern Mexico