Blyth's Hornbill

Blyth's Hornbill
Adult male at Lincoln Park Zoo
Female
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Bucerotiformes
Family: Bucerotidae
Genus: Rhyticeros
Species: R. plicatus
Binomial name
Rhyticeros plicatus
(J.R.Forst., 1781)
Diversity
6 subspecies
Synonyms

Aceros plicatus (Forster, 1781)

The Blyth's Hornbill (Rhyticeros plicatus) is also known as Papuan Hornbill. Its local name in Tok Pisin is kokomo. It is a large hornbill species inhabiting the forest canopy in the Wallacea and Melanesia.[1]

Previously, this hornbill was placed in the genus Aceros. It has in the past been often lumped with the Plain-pouched Hornbill (R. subruficollis), and sometimes considered to include the Narcondam Hornbill (R. narcondami) and the Wreathed Hornbill (R. undulatus) as subspecies.[2]

Contents

Description

Up to 91 cm in length, the adult male has a mainly black plumage with a golden or orange-buff coloured head, white throat and a white tail. Its irides are reddish brown, surrounded by naked pale blue skin around the eye. The female is a smaller predominantly black bird with a white throat and tail. Both sexes have a very large, horn-coloured, bill and casque. Both sexes of young birds resemble the male. Adults have up to eight folds on the pale casque, depending on age, while young birds have none.[3]

In flight the sound of its wings is loud and distinctive, a rushing noise that has been compared to the sound of steam escaping from a steam locomotive. As well as the noise produced by its wings, the Papuan Hornbill has a range of far-reaching, guttural grunting and laughing calls.[3]

Subspecies

Various subspecies have been described across its range:[4]

Distribution and ecology

The Papuan Hornbill occurs throughout lowland forests, from sea level up to 1,200-1,500 m ASL, in the Moluccas, New Guinea, the Bismarck Archipelago, and as far east as the Solomon Islands. It is the only hornbill species native to New Guinea, and one of the largest flying birds of the region.[5]

Its diet consists mainly of fruits – especially figs (Ficus) –, occasionally supplemented with insects and other small animals.[3]

The Papuan Hornbill nests in a large rainforest tree hollow from 18 m to at least 30 m above the ground. The female is restricted to the nest cavity throughout the incubation and nestling period, being largely sealed within with the entrance plastered up by a mixture of fruit pulp and rotten wood, leaving only a narrow aperture through which she is fed by the male. The clutch size is about two eggs.[6]

Status and relationship with humans

Still widespread throughout its large habitat range, the Papuan Hornbill is evaluated as a Species of Least Concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.[7]

However, it is subject to hunting pressure by some tribal groups, with its feathers used in headdresses, its bill being valued as a personal adornment, and the lower mandible used as a spear point. As a consequence, it is becoming rarer in some areas of New Guinea. On the other hand, this species has withstood tens of millennia of human hunting pressure, so as long as sufficient habitat is preserved, it is unlikely that hunting alone is a significant threat.[8]

Footnotes

  1. ^ Majnep & Bulmer (1977): p.129, Coates (1985), Coates & Bishop (1997)
  2. ^ Rasmussen (2000)
  3. ^ a b c Coates (1985): p.442
  4. ^ Coates (1985): p.444, Coates & Bishop (1997): p.148, Steadman (2006): pp.123,153,366-367
  5. ^ Coates (1985), Coates & Bishop (1997)
  6. ^ Coates (1985): p.444
  7. ^ BLI (2008)
  8. ^ Majnep & Bulmer (1977): p.129, Coates (1985): pp.442,444, Steadman (2006): pp.366-367

References

External links