Nombre en español: Bandurria Aliblanca
Nombre en ingles: Buff-necked Ibis
Nombre científico: Theristicus caudatus
Familia: Threskiornithidae
Foto: Ramiro Ramirez
Audio: Gabriel Leite (xeno-canto)
La bandurria o tostés (Theristicus caudatus) es una especie de ave pelecaniforme de la familiaThreskiornithidae. Es un ibis grande y pesado de varios colores.
Distribución geográfica
Se distribuye en las zonas orientales de América del Sur, desde Colombia a Perú, norte y sur de la Argentina, casi todo Chile y el Uruguay.
Características
Historia natural
La bandurria vive en bosques, pantanos, sabanas, lagos y bosques abiertos. Se presenta en diversos tipos de hábitats con vegetación baja o rala, como orillas de lagunas y ríos, playas cenagosas, pantanos, praderas y pastizales húmedos, lomas arenosas con vegetación de fanerógamas, campos cultivados y barbechos. A menudo descansa en laderas de cerros o sobre barrancos desérticos. Durante los meses de septiembre anidan por colonias en laderas pedregosas escarpadas. Es un ave de caza. Por ser una presa grande y de carne comestible los cazadores la persiguen bastante en algunas regiones, siendo necesario el reglamento de su caza.
Subespecies
Se conocen dos subespecies de Theristicus caudatus:
- Theristicus caudatus caudatus (Boddaert, 1783)
- Theristicus caudatus hyperorius Todd, 1948
Buff-necked ibis
The buff-necked ibis (Theristicus caudatus), also known as the white-throated ibis, is a fairly large ibis found widely in open habitats of eastern and northern South America. It formerly included the similar black-faced ibis as a subspecies, but that species is almost entirely restricted to colder parts of South America, has a buff (not dark grey) lower chest, and lacks the contrasting large white wing-patches.
Description
It has a total length of approximately 75 centimetres (30 in). The neck is buffish, the upperparts are grey, the belly and flight feathers are black, and there is a large white patch in the wings. In flight, where the relatively short legs do not extend beyond the tail (unlike e.g. Eudocimus and Plegadis), the white patch forms a broad white band on the upperwing that separates the black remiges and the grey lesser wing-coverts. The bill and bare skin around the eyes are blackish and the legs are red.
Habitat and status
The buff-necked ibis lives in a wide range of open habitats, including fields, marshes, savanna and grassland. There are two primary populations; the nominate subspecies is found across northern and central South America in Colombia, Venezuela, the Guianas and Brazil, while the very similar subspecies hyperorius is found in south-central South America in southern Brazil, eastern and northern Bolivia, Paraguay, southern Chile, Uruguay, and northern Argentina. It is almost entirely restricted to tropical and warmer subtropical lowlands, but very locally it extends into highlands (though never as high as the Andean ibis). It is almost entirely resident, although local movements may occur. It has been recorded as an accidental visitor in Panama.
With a large range and an estimated population of 25,000 to 100,000, the buff-necked ibis is evaluated as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.
Behavior
Its diet consists mainly of insects, spiders, frogs, reptiles, snails, invertebrates and small mammals found in soft soils. The female usually lays two to four eggs in a platform nest, made from twigs and branches, in a tree.
Wikipedia/Ebird