Fawn-breasted bowerbird

Chlamydera cerviniventris

The fawn-breasted bowerbird is a medium-sized, up to 32 cm long, bowerbird with a greyish brown spotted white plumage, a black bill, dark brown iris, yellow mouth and an orange buff below. Both sexes are similar. The female is slightly smaller than the male.
Fawn-breasted Bowerbird From the Bowerbird family. This one does not have beautifully colored feathers and does not build extremely flamboyant bowers like its cousin the Vogelkop Bowerbird but he has a great song and some crazy complicated dance moves to compensate for what it lacks. Birdingindonesia,Chlamydera cerviniventris,Fall,Fawn-breasted bowerbird,Geotagged,Indonesia,Mehd Halaouate

Distribution

The fawn-breasted bowerbird is distributed throughout New Guinea and northern Cape York Peninsula, where it inhabits the tropical forests, mangroves, savanna woodlands and forest edges. Its diet consists mainly of figs, fruits and insects. The nest is a loose cup made of small sticks up in a tree. The bower itself is that of ""avenue-type"" with two side-walls of sticks and usually decorated with green-colored berries.

Status

A common species in its habitat range, the fawn-breasted bowerbird is evaluated as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderPasseriformes
FamilyPtilonorhynchidae
GenusChlamydera
SpeciesC. cerviniventris
Photographed in
Indonesia