イワウロコインコ vs コンゴウインコ
Pyrrhura rupicola 比較対象 Ara macao
Side-by-Side Comparison
| 属性 | イワウロコインコ | コンゴウインコ |
|---|---|---|
| 学名 | Pyrrhura rupicola | Ara macao |
| 目 | Psittaciformes | Psittaciformes |
| 科 | Psittacidae | Psittacidae |
| 保全状況 | Least Concern | Least Concern |
| 体長 | — | 85.0 cm (33.5 in) |
| 翼開長 | 24.8 cm (9.8 in) | 110.0 cm (43.3 in) |
| 体重 | 75.0 g (2.65 oz) | 1000.0 g (35.27 oz) |
| 食性 | -- | Fruits, nuts, seeds, and flowers from rainforest canopy trees. Visits clay licks to detoxify compounds … |
| 一腹卵数 | 7 | 1-4 |
| Population Trend | — | — |
Size Comparison
Habitat Comparison
コンゴウインコ
Humid tropical lowland rainforests, gallery forests, and forest edges. Requires large mature trees with cavities for nesting.
Song & Call Comparison
イワウロコインコ
コンゴウインコ
Very loud, raucous squawking screams 'araak-araak'. Also gives chattering contact calls in pairs. Capable of mimicking human speech in captivity. Highly vocal throughout the day.
Geographic Range & Migration
イワウロコインコ
コンゴウインコ
Southern Mexico through Central America to Amazonian South America, including Peru, Bolivia, Brazil, and Colombia.
保全状況
イワウロコインコ
コンゴウインコ
How to Tell Them Apart
イワウロコインコ
コンゴウインコ
Brilliant scarlet red body with bright yellow wing coverts and blue flight feathers and tail. Large white bare facial patch around the eye.
Large, strongly curved bill — pale horn upper mandible, dark lower mandible
About These Birds
イワウロコインコ
The Black-capped Parakeet is a medium-sized, green parakeet of southwestern Amazonian forests in Peru and Bolivia, with a distinctive blackish cap, scaly appearance on the breast, and maroon tail. It inhabits lowland tropical forests and forest edges, foraging in the canopy for seeds, fruits, and berries. It is social, moving in small to medium-sized noisy flocks through the forest.
コンゴウインコ
The scarlet macaw is one of the most iconic tropical birds with its dazzling tricolor plumage. These highly intelligent parrots form lifelong pair bonds and can live over 75 years in captivity. They play an important ecological role as seed dispersers in Neotropical rainforests.