Published February 20, 2018 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Icteridae Vigors 1825

Description

Icteridae

Dolichonyx oryzivorus (MGT): breeds in North America from May to July and flies non-stop in August through the sea of the Antilles and the coast of Venezuela. In Florida these birds converge into large flocks until they reach their wintering areas in eastern Bolivia, southern central Brazil, Paraguay and northern Argentina, covering 20,000 km in this round trip. Its main wintering site is the Pampas from southeastern South America (Di Giácomo & Krapovickas, 2005; Azpiroz et al., 2012). This species reaches the Pantanal in MT in Brazil in November, and then northeastern Bolivia, Paraguay and the Pampas in Argentina, after crossing the entire Amazonian region (Sick, 1983, 1997; Fraga & Christie, 2016). Three individuals were recorded for Cachoeira de Nazaré/RO in November while flying across the Amazon (Stotz et al., 1992). Geolocation data from 15 individuals captured in three different breeding areas in the USA suggested that fall migration occurs through the Caribbean with a stopover in northern Venezuela, and another in Bolivia in November. 12 individuals flew to a region in Argentina between December and March, where they molted completely before the spring return migration (Renfrew et al., 2013). Records for RS were made in December (Belton, 1985) and sound records for MT in November, while photographic records for MS were between November and March. For SP there is only one record in January (WikiAves, 2016). Museum records are restricted to AM in April (MPEG).

Notes

Published as part of Somenzari, Marina, Amaral, Priscilla Prudente do, Cueto, Víctor R., Guaraldo, André de Camargo, Jahn, Alex E., Lima, Diego Mendes, Lima, Pedro Cerqueira, Lugarini, Camile, Machado, Caio Graco, Martinez, Jaime, Nascimento, João Luiz Xavier do, Pacheco, José Fernando, Paludo, Danielle, Prestes, Nêmora Pauletti, Serafini, Patrícia Pereira, Silveira, Luís Fábio, Sousa, Antônio Emanuel Barreto Alves de, Sousa, Nathália Alves de, Souza, Manuella Andrade de, Telino-Júnior, Wallace Rodrigues & Whitney, Bret Myers, 2018, An overview of migratory birds in Brazil, pp. 1-66 in Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia 58 on page 22, DOI: 10.11606/1807-0205/2018.58.03, http://zenodo.org/record/5234679

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Linked records

Additional details

References

  • Di Giacomo, A. S. & Krapovickas, S. 2005. Conserving the grassland Important Bird Areas (IBAs) of southern South America: Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Brazil. USDA Forest Service General Technical Reports, 1243 - 1249.
  • Azpiroz, A. B.; Isacch, J. P.; Dias, R. A.; Di Giacomo, A. S.; Fontana, C. S. & Palarea, C. M. 2012. Ecology and conservation of grassland birds in southeastern South America: a review. Journal of Field Ornithology, 83 (3): 217 - 246.
  • Sick, H. 1983. MigracoesdeavesnaAmericadoSulContinental (traducao: Walter A. Voss). Brasilia, Cemave - Instituto Brasileiro de Desenvolvimento Florestal. (Publicacao Tecnica nº 2).
  • Sick, H. 1997. Ornitologia brasileira. Edicao revista e ampliada. Rio de Janeiro, Nova Fronteira.
  • Fraga, R. & Christie, D. A. 2016. Bobolink (Dolichonyx oryzivorus). In: del Hoyo, J.; Elliott, A.; Sargatal, J.; Christie, D. A. & de Juana, E. (Eds.). Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive. Barcelona, Lynx Edicions. Available at: www. hbw. com / node / 62323. Access in: 12 / 06 / 2016.
  • Stotz, D. F.; Bierregaard, R. O.; Con-Haft, M.; Peterman, P.; Smith, J.; Wittaker, A. & Wilson, S. V. 1992. The status of north american migrants in Central Amazonian Brazil. Condor, 94 (3): 608 - 621.
  • Renfrew, R. B.; Kim, D.; Perlut, N.; Smith, J.; Fox, J. & Marra, P. P. 2013. Phenological matching across hemispheres in a long-distance migratory bird. Diversity and Distributions, 19 (8): 1008 - 1019.
  • Belton, W. 1985. Birds of Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil. Part 2. Formicariidae through Corvidae. Bulletin of American Museum of Natural History, 180 (1): 1 - 241.