Silver Beaked Tanager

Ramphocelus carbo

The silver-beaked tanager is a medium-sized passerine bird. This tanager is a resident breeder in South America from eastern Colombia and Venezuela south to Paraguay and central Brazil, Perú and on Trinidad. It is common and conspicuous.
Silver-beaked tanager This little beauty wanted his picture taken,  he flew into my backyard when I stayed in Paramaribo Suriname last year Geotagged,Ramphocelus carbo,Spring,Suriname,silver-beaked tanager

Appearance

Silver-beaked tanagers are 18 centimetres long and weigh 25 grams. Adult males are velvety crimson black with a deep crimson throat and breast. The upper mandible of the bill is black, but the enlarged lower mandible is bright silver in appearance. The bill is pointed upwards in display. The female is much duller, with brownish upperparts, reddish brown underparts and a black bill.

There is considerable plumage variation between the various subspecies, differing mainly in the degree of contrast between the upperparts and the throat and breast.
Silver-Beaked Tanager, Mocagua, Colombia  Colombia,Colombia 2024,Geotagged,Leticia,Ramphocelus carbo,Silver Beaked Tanager,South America,Spring,World

Naming

The silver-beaked tanager was first described by the German naturalist Peter Simon Pallas in 1764 and given the binomial name "Lanius carbo".
Silver-Beaked Tanager (Ramphocelus carbo) A Silver-Beaked Tanager I saw at Ajoupa Gardens, a small reserve in Freeport, Central Trinidad.  Geotagged,Ramphocelus carbo,Silver Beaked Tanager,Spring,Trinidad and Tobago

Habitat

It occurs in light woodland and cultivated areas.
Silver-beaked Tanager, Mocagua, Colombia  Colombia,Colombia 2024,Geotagged,Leticia,Ramphocelus carbo,Silver Beaked Tanager,South America,Spring,World

Reproduction

The bulky cup nest is usually built in a bush, and the normal clutch is two green-blue eggs blotched with black-brown. The female incubates the eggs for 11–13 days before they hatch. The chicks fledge after another 11–12 days.

Individuals may live at least 11 years in the wild.
Silver-beaked Tanager Often seen in the canopy and close to ground flitting in and out. Mato Grosso,Ramphocelus carbo,Rio Juruena,Silver-beaked tanager

Food

These are social birds which eat mainly fruit, but vines, nectar, short grass and insects are also taken. The silver-beaked tanager is often seen in groups of six to ten, frequently giving a call described as "cheeng". Its song is a slow thin "kick-wick".

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderPasseriformes
FamilyThraupidae
GenusRamphocelus
SpeciesR. carbo