Helmeted curassow explained

The helmeted curassow (Pauxi pauxi) or northern helmeted curassow, is a large terrestrial bird in the family Cracidae found in the subtropical cloud-forest in steep, mountainous regions of western Venezuela and northern Colombia. There are two subspecies found in different mountain ranges. It is a mostly black bird with a white tip to its tail, a red bill and a distinctive grey casque on its forehead. The population of this bird is in decline and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has rated its conservation status as "endangered".

Description

It is a large terrestrial black curassow with a small head, large bluish grey casque on forehead, red bill, white-tipped tail feathers, greenish glossed mantle and breast feathers, and white below. Both sexes are similar. Length in adult birds can vary from 80to. The male, at 3.6 kg (8 lbs), is larger than the female, at 2.6 kg (5.8 lbs). Among standard measurements, the wing chord is 36.3to, the tail is 30.4to and the tarsus is 8.9to.[1] Some rare rufous morph female has a black barred and reddish brown plumage. For some time, it also contained the horned curassow taxa as subspecies. Nowadays its southern congener is considered a distinct species P. unicornis.

Distribution

One of the largest birds in its habitat, the helmeted curassow is distributed in the eastern Andes of Venezuela and Colombia. In a recent study done in Tamá National Natural Park of Colombia, it suggested that the park contains a significant population of helmeted curassow with a population density of 4.8 individuals per square kilometer.[2] Furthermore, it was noted that most of the observed helmeted curassow occupied the lower strata, forest floor and subcanopy, of the forest, where they are vulnerable to poachers during the dry season. The diet consists mainly of seeds, fruits, insects and small animals. The female lays two cream-colored eggs and incubates them for about 30 days.

Status

The helmeted curassow is listed on Appendix II of CITES. Formerly classified as a Vulnerable species by the IUCN,[3] recent research shows that its numbers are decreasing more and more rapidly. It is consequently uplisted to Endangered status in 2008.

Taxonomy

There are two subspecies:

Cordillera de Mérida into Cordillera Oriental, Colombia

Casque larger, egg-shaped

Serranía del Perijá

Casque smaller, less bulbous, rather cylindrical in shape.

Their evolutionary history is not well researched compared to other curassows. The helmeted curassows probably are a lineage of Late Miocene (Tortonian - Messinian, about 8–7 million years ago) origin. This species' present-day distribution suggests that it became isolated some 6 million years ago as its mountain range uplifted.[4] It is not known when gene flow between the subspecies ceased.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Curassows, Guans and Chachalacas by Nigel Hughes. Wildside Books (UK). 2006,
  2. Setina . Víctor . Lizcano . Diego J. . Brooks . Daniel M. . Silveira . Luís Fábio . 2012 . Population Density of the Helmeted Curassow (Pauxi pauxi) in Tamá National Park, Colombia . The Wilson Journal of Ornithology . 124 . 2 . 316–320 . 10.1676/11-097.1 . 54671721 . 1559-4491.
  3. Web site: 2007-08-28 . What's new (2007) . https://web.archive.org/web/20070828022837/http://www.birdlife.org/action/science/species/global_species_programme/whats_new.html . 2007-08-28 . 2022-11-18 . BirdLife International.
  4. Pereira . Sérgio Luiz . Baker . Allan J. . 2004-07-01 . Fleischer . R. C. . Vicariant Speciation of Curassows (Aves, Cracidae): A Hypothesis Based on Mitochondrial DNA Phylogeny . The Auk . en . 121 . 3 . 682–694 . 10.1093/auk/121.3.682 . 1938-4254. free .