Black-eared Wood-quail
A species of Wood quails Scientific name : Odontophorus melanotis Genus : Wood quails
Black-eared Wood-quail, A species of Wood quails
Botanical name: Odontophorus melanotis
Genus: Wood quails
Content
Description General Info
Photo By neomorphus , used under CC-BY-NC-4.0 /Cropped and compressed from original
Description
The black-eared wood quail (Odontophorus melanotis) is a gallinaceous bird found in Central America. It’s body is dark brown or black with a rufous breast. The most characteristic features of this bird are its unspotted chestnut crown and crest and its black face and throat. It has a black bill, blue-black legs and a purple bare ring around its eye. Females are close in appearance to males, but have a blue-black eye ring instead of purple, darker sides of the head and duller chestnut colors. The black-eared wood quail is very similar in appearance to the Rufous-fronted wood quail (Odontophorus erythrops), but the Rufous-fronted wood quail has a distinctive white jugular band that is absent in the black-eared wood quail.
Size
28 cm
Feeding Habits
Very little information is available on the specific diet and feeding strategies of black-eared wood quail. However, black-eared wood quail, like other New World wood quail, are surmised to scratch in leaf-litter for insects and fallen fruit.
General Info
Behavior
The black-eared wood quail is presumed to be sedentary and is not known to migrate. Individuals of this species can be found alone, in pairs or in small groups of up to 10 or 12 individuals called coveys.
Distribution Area
Despite the insufficient amount of data available, most species of Odontophorus, including the black-eared wood quail, are considered to be forest-adapted and typically found in tropical and lower subtropical forest habitats. They are territorial, ground dwelling and often found on the forest floor of virgin forests or in the vegetation of thick second growth. The black-eared wood quail persists across the Caribbean slope of central America; including Honduras, Nicaragua and Costa Rica, as well as eastern Panama and likely the northwest of Columbia.
Species Status
There is insufficient information available for many species of wood quail which has resulted in inaccurate conservation assessments based on unreliable data. Deforestation is the major threat to the species as well as hunting. The black-eared wood quail’s population is decreasing and the total population is thought to be less than 50,000 birds. Nonetheless, black-eared wood quail are not considered to be globally threatened and are of least concern on the IUCN Red List, although more extensive studies and surveys are highly recommended and required for more accurate conservation conclusions.
Photo By neomorphus , used under CC-BY-NC-4.0 /Cropped and compressed from original
Scientific Classification
Phylum
Chordates Class
Birds Family
New world quails Genus
Wood quails Species
Black-eared Wood-quail