The breeding biology and natural history of Gray Tinamou (Tinamus tao) is poorly known. Camera traps and artificial feeding stations allowed us to study 2 nests and to observe courtship behavior at Copalinga Ecolodge, Zamora Chinchipe province, southeast Ecuador, between February and August 2014. Nests were shallow depressions in the leaf litter. One adult male incubated 2 turquoise eggs for at least 18 d at one nest, whereas the other nest was depredated. The fledglings and adult abandoned the nest 1 d after hatching. Courtship display included chasing, coordinated movements, soft rolling vocalizations, and mating. Further, we describe plumage development from a few days after hatching to 12–13 week old immature stage and discuss the species breeding biology in comparison to other Tinamidae species.
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1 June 2018
Breeding biology of Gray Tinamou (Tinamus tao) in southeastern Ecuador
Alejandro Solano-Ugalde,
Leonardo Ordóñez-Delgado,
Catherine Vits,
Juan F. Freile
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The Wilson Journal of Ornithology
Vol. 130 • No. 2
June 2018
Vol. 130 • No. 2
June 2018
breeding
Ecuador
eggs
fledgling growth
nest
Tinamus tao