Guira Cuckoo vs Scaled Ground-Cuckoo
Guira guira เปรียบเทียบกับ Neomorphus squamiger
Side-by-Side Comparison
| คุณสมบัติ | Guira Cuckoo | Scaled Ground-Cuckoo |
|---|---|---|
| ชื่อวิทยาศาสตร์ | Guira guira | Neomorphus squamiger |
| อันดับ | Cuculiformes | Cuculiformes |
| วงศ์ตระกูล | Cuculidae | Cuculidae |
| สถานะการอนุรักษ์ | Least Concern | Not Evaluated |
| ความยาว | — | — |
| กว้างปีก | 34.7 cm (13.7 in) | — |
| น้ำหนัก | 141.73333333333335 g (5.00 oz) | 340.0 g (11.99 oz) |
| อาหาร | Omnivore of open South American country; eats large insects, small frogs, lizards, and bird eggs. … | -- |
| จำนวนไข่ | -- | -- |
| Population Trend | — | — |
Habitat Comparison
ถิ่นที่อยู่อาศัยร่วมกัน
ไม่มี
Guira Cuckoo only
Scaled Ground-Cuckoo only
Song & Call Comparison
Guira Cuckoo
Loud, gurgling call with hollow quality; distinctive multi-tonal sound carrying across open African savanna.
Scaled Ground-Cuckoo
Deep, hollow booming call; resonant bass notes carrying far across dense humid tropical forest floor.
Geographic Range & Migration
Guira Cuckoo
Found in open habitats across South America east of the Andes from Brazil to Argentina. Resident and gregarious.
Scaled Ground-Cuckoo
สถานะการอนุรักษ์
Guira Cuckoo
Scaled Ground-Cuckoo
How to Tell Them Apart
Guira Cuckoo
Broad-billed Bronze-cuckoo: bronze-green above; broadly barred white below; wide bars; reddish eye; Australian bronze cuckoo
Scaled Ground-Cuckoo
Banded Ground-cuckoo: rufous-buff below with dark barring; dark olive above; blue facial skin; long tail; barred pattern below
About These Birds
Guira Cuckoo
A distinctive, socially gregarious cuckoo (36-42 cm) found in open habitats across South America east of the Andes. Shaggy orange-rufous crest, streaked plumage, and long tail. Omnivore, feeding on insects, small vertebrates, and eggs. Often seen in noisy family groups.
Scaled Ground-Cuckoo
Scaled Ground-Cuckoo (Neomorphus squamiger) — 45–48 cm. Bronze-olive above; scaled white-tipped breast; rufous flanks; bare blue orbital ring. Restricted to humid eastern Amazonian forest in Pará, Brazil. Non-parasitic; follows army ants. Insectivore. Vulnerable; small range threatened by deforestation.