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AuthorBirdsCaribbean
Accessioned date2024-02-05T23:00:20Z
Available date2024-02-05T23:00:20Z
Year2022
CitationBirdsCaribbean (2022). Endemic bird of the day: Eastern Chat-Tanager. From the Nest (Day 89). BirdsCaribbean. Recuperado de:es
URIhttps://bvearmb.do/handle/123456789/4010
AbstractCaribbean Endemic Bird Festival (CEBF) day 89 poster, dedicated to the Eastern Chat-Tanager. If you find yourself birding on the high elevation mountain forests of Cordillera Central, Sierra de Neiba, and Bahoruco Oriental, on the island of Hispaniola, keep an eye out for the elusive Eastern Chat-Tanager! It is a shy, ground-dwelling bird that can be hard to see, but easily heard singing at dawn. The Eastern Chat-Tanager is a medium size bird, a bit smaller than a Mockingbird, with a long tail and strong long legs and feet. It is dark olive-brown above, with a white throat and grayish underparts, yellow eyering, and a spot of yellow at the bend of the wings, which is hardly seen. It often sings from a low perch within dense vegetation – an emphatic, clear whistling “chip-chip-swep-swep-swep” or “chirri-chirri-chirri-chip-chip-chip,” repeated many times. Eastern Chat-Tanagers are usually seen in pairs, foraging on or near the ground, searching through the leaf litter. They feed primarily on insects and small invertebrates, and a small amount of fruit. This species is often observed flying short distances, close to the ground, across a narrow path or trail, from one patch of vegetation to an adjacent one. Endemic to the island of Hispaniola, the Eastern Chat-Tanager is quite a unique bird. It belongs to the Caribbean endemic bird family, Calyptophilidae, from the Greek word Calyptophilus (“loving to hide”). There are three (3) recognized subspecies. Information on the Eastern Chat-Tanager is limited, due to its secretive nature and hard to navigate habitat. To date, only one nest has been described and published. The Eastern Chat-Tanager is uncommon on Hispaniola with a limited distribution. Its conservation status is considered to be Near Threatened by the IUCN, due to habitat fragmentation and destruction—mostly from uncontrolled logging and the clearing of forests for agriculture. As a complement to the poster, a coloring sheet is included.es
LanguageEnglishes
PublishedBirdsCaribbeanes
Rights© BirdsCaribbean. Available at: https://www.birdscaribbean.org/es
SubjectBiodiversidad - República Dominicanaes
SubjectAves ─ República Dominicanaes
SubjectHábitats y especieses
TitleEndemic bird of the day : Eastern Chat-Tanageres
URLhttps://www.birdscaribbean.org/2022/05/from-the-nest-day-89/
Material typeInfographic - Posteres
Type of contentCultural or scientific informationes
Type of contentDidactic - Educational - Interactivees
AccessOpenes
AudienceChildren and juvenilees
AudienceGenerales


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© BirdsCaribbean. Available at: https://www.birdscaribbean.org/
© BirdsCaribbean. Available at: https://www.birdscaribbean.org/