By Vinuri Randhula Silva,
The Guianan cock-of-the-rock (Rupicola rupicola) is a species of cotinga, a passerine bird from South America. It is about 30 cm (12 in) in length and weighs about 200 to 220 g (7.1 to 7.8 oz). It is found in tropical rain forests, near its preferred habitat of rocky outcrops. The female's plumage is brownish / dark smokey grey in colour, and generally less noticeable than the males because of their nesting work in rocky areas. The male's feathers are a bright orange. Both have a heavy body, broad-based bill and wear a remarkable half-moon crest on the head. It is one of two species of the genus Rupicola, the other being the Andean cock-of-the-rock. The Guianan cock-of-the-rock lives across the forested region of northeastern South America. Its diet consists mostly of fruit, but they sometimes feast on small snakes and lizards.
The Guianan cock-of-the-rock breeds in the early months of the year and, on average, the female lays her eggs around March. The females choose a mate by flying down to the ground and pecking the male on his rump. The male then turns around and the mating takes place almost immediately. During the height of the mating season, males engage in competitive displays in lek, which is a complex courting behaviour that is done to attract females. Males and females live separately except when the females choose a mate. The mating success varies based on multiple factors, ranging from the plumage. exhibited by a male to the composition of the lek itself. There is speculation that the male-to-male competition is an important factor in lek formation and breeding. The main predators of the Guianan cock-of-the-rock are harpy eagles and black-and-white hawk-eagles.
The Guianan cock-of-the-rock is a stout-bodied bird with a prominent half-moon crest. It is a sexually dimorphic bird. The male's crest is more pronounced than the female's and is bright orange. The males also have an orange-tipped black tail, black, orange and white wings, a bright orange bill, an orange iris yellowing as it nears the outer edge, and silky-orange filamentous feathers of the inner remiges. Both sexes also have orange legs and skin. The less conspicuous female is dark brownish-grey overall and has a yellow-tipped black bill, a duller orange iris, and a smaller crest. One-year-old juvenile males look similar to an adult female, but have orange speckles over their bodies. After two years, the juvenile males become mostly orange with brown and grey spots. Males attain their definitive plumage at around three years. Juvenile females look almost identical to their adult counterparts. Guianan cocks-of-the-rock have a total length of approximately 30 cm (12 in) and a total weight of around 200 to 220 g (7.1 to 7.8 oz). The two species of cock-of-the-rock are allopatric, and therefore do not meet with one another. The plumage of the male Andean cock-of-the- rock is redder and its wings are mostly black, lacking the orange colouration seen on the male Guianan. The female Andean cock-of-the-rock is reddish brown rather than the brownish-gray of the Guianan.
As suggested by its name, the Guianan cock-of-the-rock is found
in the Guianan Shield,
occurring in French Guiana, Suriname, Guyana, southern Venezuela, eastern Colombia and northern Amazonian Brazil. Its preferred habitats are humid forests
near rocky outcrops. They are normally found at an altitude of 300 to
2,000 m (980 to 6,560 ft).
The Guianan cock-of-the-rock has distinctive territorial markings. Males usually take dominance of an area on the ground, although sometimes they occupy middle strata in forests. They make their characteristic marking by clearing out debris from the ground, including twigs, leaves, and pellets. This area is called a “court”. Quality of courts are known to have some influence on mate choice. The court quality is determined by the territory density and location to the center of activity in the lek. The reason for the focus on the center of activity in the lek is that successful males tended to own courts in the most densely clustered lek areas. Guianan courts are commonly found in the Guianan Shield, a forested region in northeastern South America.
The diet of the adult Guianan cock-of-the-rock consists mainly
of fruits meaning they are frugivorous. Up to 65 species of fruit have
been reported in their diet, primarily from canopy trees or lianas. Three quarters (75%) of the fruit eaten by
the Guianan cock-of-the-rock at one study site were either black- or
red-coloured fruit In British Guiana, E. Thomas. Gilliard found papayas growing at the base of a huge rock. On
top of the rock were perched females that were nesting. He found that no other
papayas were growing in that part of the forest and speculated that the perched
females ate papayas in the forest where they are native and dropped the seeds
below where they were nesting. Small snakes, lizards, insects and frogs are occasionally found in its diet. By selectively
feeding on nearby fruit trees and then defecating or regurgitating the seeds
within the leks, these birds can actively influence the regeneration and
succession of the forest habitat where.
Guianan cocks-of-the-rock breed early in the year, and the females lay their eggs around March, nesting in rocky areas. During the height of mating season, males gather in leks with multiple males defending a social display arena of much greater area than that of a lone male. The males each have their own area on the forest floor where they make their courts. The size of each court is about 1 metre (3 ft) in diameter, and the next bird is often about 3 metres (10 ft) away. The females and males live separately; only when it is time to mate do females fly over to observe and choose a male. When this occurs, the females tap the males from behind and insemination quickly follows. When females approach a lek, the males stand firmly and present themselves rigidly.
Nesting
Unlike
other species of the family Cotingidae, the Guianan cock-of-the-rock makes
its nest on rocky cliff faces and caves rather than in the trees. The
female lays one or two eggs in the nest of mud and plant material, which is
attached by saliva to a vertical rock. The female takes care of the building
and maintenance of the nest, the incubation of the eggs and the parenting.
The male does not participate at all. Eggs typically incubate for 27–28 days.
The ideal nesting sites for this species are usually located in a cave or
vertical rock face with crevices that provide some shelter and protection from
the elements. The nests themselves are solid moldings formed from mud and plant
material deposited into the crevices. Due to the solid nature of these nests,
they typically persist from one breeding season to the next. Females will make
repairs to their nests as a breeding season begins.The smaller of the two cocks-of-the-rock, the male Guianan takes
the lesser part in breeding. It is polygynous and
has nothing to do with nesting once mating is done. The male's energy instead
is devoted to very elaborate display rituals that show off his
magnificent plumage.
These displays take place in communal leks, where 40 or more males may gather to
challenge rivals and beckon to the females.
Males often engage in courtship disruption practices. In a study conducted by Pepper W. Trail, the interactions between adult males, females, and yearlings were observed and linked to mate choice and male dispersion patterns within leks. Adult males produced this disruptive behaviour with varying intensity, which depended on the situation. In lower-intensity disruptions, males usually directed their aggression or threats towards neighboring males, in attempts to improve or maintain breeding status and success. The males that were hassled tended to be more successful and often were disrupted with much greater frequency than males with lower mating success. Higher-intensity disruptions were used by less successful males and directed towards females that wandered by. This behaviour is suggested to have the effect of redirecting females towards the hassling male. Yearlings often disrupted courtships of the more mature adults on the basis of practice for future courtships, since the yearlings do not possess any territory within the lek. Female disruption was an uncommon event that had little, if any, effect on the accessibility of a male. Young males of highly promiscuous species such as the Cock-of-the rock often failed to mate in their first year, probably because older, more experienced males will enjoy the majority of matings. In this strong system of sexual selection, the successive breeding of dominant and aggressive males leads to high sex drives and the endurance of polygyny. A theory suggests that the selection of these aggressive males also puts a premium, or value, on female characteristics. Hence, there is a less likely occurrence of female–elicited aggression.
Male Guianan cock-of-the-rock "delight in homosexuality" with almost 40 percent engaging in a form of homosexual activity and a small percentage never copulating with females.
References
- BirdLife International (2016). Rupicola rupicola. The IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016.
- Simpson, D.P. (1979). Cassell's Latin Dictionary (5th ed.). London, UK: Cassell. p. 883. ISBN 978-0-304-52257-6.
- Burton, Maurice; Burton, Robert (2002). International Wildlife Encyclopedia. Marshall Cavendish. p. 490. ISBN 978-0-7614-7270-4.
- Wikipedia
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