Cotinga


The cotingas are a large family, Cotingidae, of suboscine passerine birds found in Central America and tropical South America. Cotingas are birds of forests or forest edges, that are primary frugivorous. They all have broad bills with hooked tips, rounded wings, and strong legs. They range in size from of the fiery-throated fruiteater up to of the Amazonian umbrellabird.

Description

Cotingas vary widely in social structure. There is a roughly 50/50 divide in the family between species with biparental care, and those in which the males play no part in raising the young. The purple-throated fruitcrow lives in mixed-sex groups in which one female lays an egg and the others help provide insects to the chick.
In cotinga species where only the females care for the eggs and young, the males have striking courtship displays, often grouped together in leks. Such sexual selection results in the males of these species, including the Guianan cock-of-the-rock, being brightly coloured, or decorated with plumes or wattles, like the umbrellabirds, with their umbrella-like crest and long throat wattles. Other lekking cotingids like the bellbirds and screaming piha, have distinctive and far-carrying calls. In such canopy-dwelling genera as Carpodectes, Cotinga, and Xipholena, males gather high in a single tree or in adjacent trees, but male cocks-of-the-rock, as befits their more terrestrial lives, give their elaborate displays in leks on the ground.
The females of both lekking and biparental species are duller than the males.

Breeding

Nests range from tiny to very large. Many species lay a single egg in a nest so flimsy that the egg can be seen from underneath. This may make the nests hard for predators to find. Fruiteaters build more solid cup nests, and the cocks-of-the-rock attach their mud nests to cliffs. The nests may be open cups or little platforms with loosely woven plant material, usually placed in a tree.
The clutches comprise one to four eggs. Incubation typically takes fifteen to twenty-eight days.
Fledging usually occurs at 28–33 days.

Habitat

Deserts, open woodlands, coastal mangroves, and humid tropical forests. Cotingas face very serious threats from loss of their habitats.

Taxonomy and systematics

The family Cotingidae was introduced by the French naturalist Charles Lucien Bonaparte in 1849.
The family contains 66 species divided into 25 genera.
ImageGenusLiving species
Ampelion
Phibalura
  • Swallow-tailed cotinga, Phibalura flavirostris
  • Zaratornis
  • White-cheeked cotinga, Zaratornis stresemanni
  • Doliornis
  • Chestnut-bellied cotinga, Doliornis remseni
  • Bay-vented cotinga, Doliornis sclateri
  • Phytotoma
  • White-tipped plantcutter or reddish plantcutter, Phytotoma rutila
  • Rufous-tailed plantcutter or Chilean plantcutter, Phytotoma rara
  • Peruvian plantcutter, Phytotoma raimondii
  • Carpornis
  • Hooded berryeater, Carpornis cucullata
  • Black-headed berryeater, Carpornis melanocephala
  • Pipreola
  • Barred fruiteater, Pipreola arcuata
  • Golden-breasted fruiteater, Pipreola aureopectus
  • Fiery-throated fruiteater, Pipreola chlorolepidota
  • Handsome fruiteater, Pipreola formosa
  • Scarlet-breasted fruiteater, Pipreola frontalis
  • Band-tailed fruiteater, Pipreola intermedia
  • Orange-breasted fruiteater, Pipreola jucunda
  • Black-chested fruiteater, Pipreola lubomirskii
  • Masked fruiteater, Pipreola pulchra
  • Green-and-black fruiteater, Pipreola riefferii
  • Red-banded fruiteater, Pipreola whitelyi
  • Ampelioides
  • Scaled fruiteater, Ampelioides tschudii
  • Rupicola
  • Guianan cock-of-the-rock, Rupicola rupicola
  • Andean cock-of-the-rock, Rupicola peruvianus
  • Phoenicircus
  • Guianan red cotinga, Phoenicircus carnifex
  • Black-necked red cotinga, Phoenicircus nigricollis
  • Cotinga
  • Lovely cotinga, Cotinga amabilis
  • Turquoise cotinga, Cotinga ridgwayi
  • Blue cotinga, Cotinga nattererii
  • Plum-throated cotinga, Cotinga maynana
  • Purple-breasted cotinga, Cotinga cotinga
  • Banded cotinga, Cotinga maculata
  • Spangled cotinga, Cotinga cayana
  • Procnias
  • Three-wattled bellbird, Procnias tricarunculatus
  • White bellbird, Procnias albus
  • Bearded bellbird, Procnias averano
  • Bare-throated bellbird, Procnias nudicollis
  • Tijuca
  • Black-and-gold cotinga, Tijuca atra
  • Grey-winged cotinga, Tijuca condita
  • Lipaugus
  • Dusky piha, Lipaugus fuscocinereus
  • Scimitar-winged piha, Lipaugus uropygialis
  • Screaming piha, Lipaugus vociferans
  • Rufous piha, Lipaugus unirufus
  • Cinnamon-vented piha, Lipaugus lanioides
  • Rose-collared piha, Lipaugus streptophorus
  • Chestnut-capped piha, Lipaugus weberi
  • Conioptilon
  • Black-faced cotinga, Conioptilon mcilhennyi
  • Snowornis
  • Olivaceous piha, Snowornis cryptolophus
  • Grey-tailed piha, Snowornis subalaris
  • Porphyrolaema
  • Purple-throated cotinga, Porphyrolaema porphyrolaema
  • Xipholena
  • Pompadour cotinga, Xipholena punicea
  • White-tailed cotinga, Xipholena lamellipennis
  • White-winged cotinga, Xipholena atropurpurea
  • Carpodectes
  • Black-tipped cotinga, Carpodectes hopkei
  • Yellow-billed cotinga, Carpodectes antoniae
  • Snowy cotinga, Carpodectes nitidus
  • Gymnoderus
  • Bare-necked fruitcrow, Gymnoderus foetidus
  • Querula
  • Purple-throated fruitcrow, Querula purpurata
  • Haematoderus
  • Crimson fruitcrow, Haematoderus militaris
  • Pyroderus
  • Red-ruffed fruitcrow, Pyroderus scutatus
  • Perissocephalus
  • Capuchinbird, Perissocephalus tricolor
  • Cephalopterus
  • Long-wattled umbrellabird, Cephalopterus penduliger
  • Amazonian umbrellabird, Cephalopterus ornatus
  • Bare-necked umbrellabird, Cephalopterus glabricollis
  • A number of species previously placed in this family are now placed in the family Tityridae