White-fronted Nunbird

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White-fronted Nunbird
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Piciformes
Family: Bucconidae
Genus: Monasa
Species: M. morphoeus
Binomial name
Monasa morphoeus
(Hahn & Küster, 1823)

The White-fronted Nunbird (Monasa morphoeus) is a species of bird in the Bucconidae family, the puffbirds. It is found in Brazil, Bolivia, Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and Venezuela; in southern Central America in Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, and Panama.

Its natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist lowland forests and subtropical or tropical moist montanes.

This glossy black, or gray-black bird with a stout, medium red-orange bill is named for the white face markings at the cere, the base of its bill; also the upper throat. It has black eyes and black or gray-black legs.

The White-fronted Nunbird is found in the southern Amazon Basin with the Amazon River its northern limit, and extends to Maranhão state on the Atlantic coast; in the west, specifically northwest, it is limited eastwards by the lower reaches of the Rio Negro but extends westward towards the eastern Andes foothills. Its ranges skips the cordillera, but continues west of the Andes into southern Central America to Nicaragua and Honduras.

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