Yellow-knobbed curassow

Crax daubentoni

The yellow-knobbed curassow is a large species of bird found in forest and woodland in Colombia and Venezuela. It feeds mainly on the ground, but flies up into trees if threatened. Its most striking features are its crest, made of feathers that curl forward, and the fleshy yellow knob at the base of its bill. Females lack this fleshy yellow knob, but otherwise resemble the male in the plumage, being overall black with a white crissum.
Yellow-knobbed Curassow - hen Female - hen of the species more lined breast & no yellow Crax daubentoni,Hato Pinero,Los Llanos,Yellow-knobbed curassow

Appearance

The adult is 84-92.5 cm and weighs about 2–3 kg. It eats fruits, leaves, seeds, and small animals. Unlike most other gamebirds, curassows nest off the ground, with both sexes helping in the construction. The female lays just 2 eggs - a tiny clutch compared to those of many ground-nesting gamebirds.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Status: Near threatened
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderGalliformes
FamilyCracidae
GenusCrax
SpeciesC. daubentoni
Photographed in
Venezuela