Nombre en español: Carriquí Violáceo
Nombre en ingles: Violaceous Jay
Nombre científico: Cyanocorax violaceus
Familia: Corvidae
Foto: Juan Ochoa
Audio: Jerome Fischer
El colluelo (Cyanocorax violaceus), también conocido como chara violácea, carriquí violáceo, urraca corobero o urraquita violácea, es una especie de ave passeriforme perteneciente a la familia Corvidae, los cuervos y semejantes.
Se encuentra en Bolivia, Brasil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Perú, y Venezuela. Su hábitat natural son los bosqueshúmedos de tierras bajas subtropicales o tropical y los bosques antiguos degradados.
Descripción
Ave de 33 cm, Ligeramente crestado; usualmente parece opaco en el campo. Cabeza, garganta y alto de pecho son negros. Banda nucal blanco lechoso se intensifica a azul violeta opaco en el resto del plumaje. Partes inferiores más pálidos y teñidas giráceo. se observa en grupos de diferentes tamaños que se desplazan por todos los lados del estrato de los bosques húmedos, secos, secundarios, de galería y áreas abiertas con árboles aislados.1
Distribución
Se distribuye por el suroeste y el noroeste de la cuenca amazónica , desde el norte de Bolivia, a través de la Amazonía oriental del Perú y Ecuador, la Amazonía Colombiana, y la cuenca del río Orinoco y más allá en el norte de Venezuela. La gama está al este de la cordillera andina, excepto en el norte de Colombia y Venezuela. En el suroeste de Guyana, (suroeste del Escudo Guayanés ), el estado de Roraima, Brasil y el Río Amazonas.
Su canto tiene un pao, iao; comenzando en tono bajo, luego subiendo y bajando bruscamente; y luego haciendo lo mismo para el iado.
Violaceous jay
The violaceous jay (Cyanocorax violaceus) is a species of bird in the family Corvidae, the crows and their allies.
It is found in Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, and Venezuela. Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests and heavily degraded former forest. This species is mainly a lowland bird although locally this jay may variously range to elevations as high as 500-1,400 m.
Description
This is a medium-large jay with dull violet-blue plumage and a striking dark face and throat. The purplish jay (with which it overlaps in southeastern Peru and in northern Bolivia) is duller (more purplish or brownish blue, less violaceous blue) and the nape is not paler than the back. In eastern Colombia and southern Venezuela, the azure-naped jay is distinguished by its pale iris, white undertail coverts and tip to the tail, paler nape, and short frontal crest. The violaceous jay is 33–38 cm (13–15 in) long and weighs 262 grams (9.2 oz.)
Behavior
The violaceous jay is omnivorous, mainly consuming fruits, insects, and bird and reptile eggs. It is also known to take small lizards as well.
Little is known in any detail about the violaceous jay’s life history. Violaceous jays in Venezuela forage chiefly in the middle and upper canopy (above 18 meters) in a mature tropical evergreen rainforest. They take food items by hopping along limbs and gleaning for prey. It forages in flocks in forest canopy, and rarely lingers in one spot for long. These flocks often are noisy, but like other jays, the violaceous jay can be quiet and inconspicuous at times. They are known to frequently mob potential predators.
Distribution
The range of the violaceous jay is the southwest and northwest Amazon Basin, from northern Bolivia, through Amazonian eastern Peru and Ecuador, Amazonian Colombia, and the Orinoco River Basin and beyond into northern Venezuela. The range is east of the Andes cordillera, except in the north in Colombia and Venezuela. In southwest Guyana, (the southwest Guiana Shield), the range borders Roraima state, Brazil and the Amazon River, (Rio Negro), tributary, the south-flowing Branco Riverof central Roraima.
In Brazil’s western Amazon Basin, the violaceous jay is found in Roraima, Amazonas, and Acre state, the west of North Region, Brazil.
Wikipedia/eBird/xeno-canto