Penelope is a bird genus in the family Cracidae consisting of a number of large turkey-like arboreal species, the typical guans. The range of these species is in forests from southern Mexico to tropical South America. These large birds have predominantly brown plumage and have relatively small heads when compared to the size of their bodies; they also bear a characteristic dewlap. Body lengths are typically 65 to 95 centimeters.
Penelope | |
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Spix's guan, Penelope jacquacu | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Galliformes |
Family: | Cracidae |
Subfamily: | Penelopinae |
Genus: | Penelope Merrem, 1786 |
Type species | |
Penelope marail Gmelin, 1788
| |
Species | |
15, see text. |
Most of the genus members have a typically raucous honking call. A number of the genus members are endangered species and at least one is critically endangered, usually due to tropical deforestation and hunting. In the case of several species the estimated populations are as low as a few 1000 mature birds, spread over a considerable area. Because of the scarcity of many of the genus members and also due to the habitat being often in deep or high altitude forests, little is known about some of the species habits and reproduction; in fact, some species are found at altitudes up to 3350 meters. Nests are typically built of twigs in trees.
This genus seems to have originated as part of the southward expansion of guans through the Andes and across tropical South America. Its closest relatives are probably the piping-guans, Aburria. These genera's ancestors apparently diverged some time during the Burdigalian, 20-15 Myr, but this is not corroborated by fossil evidence (Pereira et al. 2002).
Species
editImage | Common name | Scientific Name | Distribution |
---|---|---|---|
White-winged guan | Penelope albipennis | Lambayeque, Cajamarca and Piura, north-west Peru | |
Band-tailed guan | Penelope argyrotis | Colombia and Venezuela. | |
Bearded guan | Penelope barbata | Ecuador and Peru. | |
Yungas guan[1] | Penelope bridgesi | east slope of the Andes from Bolivia to northwestern Argentina | |
Red-faced guan | Penelope dabbenei | northern Argentina and in the southern border region of Bolivia. | |
Spix's guan | Penelope jacquacu | Bolivia, Brazil, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Peru, and Venezuela. | |
White-browed guan | Penelope jacucaca | Caatinga in north-eastern Brazil. | |
Marail guan | Penelope marail | Brazil, French Guiana, Guyana, Suriname, and Venezuela. | |
Andean guan | Penelope montagnii | Risaralda Department of Colombia, and the Yanacocha Reserve of Ecuador. | |
Dusky-legged guan | Penelope obscura | Uruguay, northeastern Argentina and southernmost areas of Paraguay and Brazil; | |
Chestnut-bellied guan | Penelope ochrogaster | Brazil. | |
Baudo guan | Penelope ortoni | western Colombia and north-western Ecuador | |
Cauca guan | Penelope perspicax | Colombia. | |
White-crested guan | Penelope pileata | eastern Amazon basin of Brazil. | |
Crested guan | Penelope purpurascens | south Mexico and the Yucatán Peninsula to western Ecuador and southern Venezuela. | |
Rusty-margined guan | Penelope superciliaris | eastern Paraguay with extreme northeast Argentina, and eastern Bolivia in the Pantanal |
References
edit- ^ "Species Updates – IOC World Bird List". Retrieved 2021-01-12.
- Pereira, Sérgio Luiz; Baker, Allan J.& Wajntal, Anita (2002): Combined nuclear and mitochondrial DNA sequences resolve generic relationships within the Cracidae (Galliformes, Aves). Systematic Biology 51(6): 946–958. doi:10.1080/10635150290102519 PMID 12554460 PDF full text