Yellow-headed Caracarra

Milvago chimachima

The yellow-headed caracara is a bird of prey in the family Falconidae, the falcons and caracaras. It is found in Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, every mainland South American country except Chile, and on Aruba, Bonaire, Curaçao, and Trinidad and Tobago....hieroglyph snipped...
Milvago chimachima  Milvago chimachima,Yellow-headed caracara

Appearance

The yellow-headed caracara is 40 to 45 cm long. Males weigh 277 to 335 g and females 307 to 364 g . Their wingspan is 74 to 95 cm . The sexes' plumages are alike. Adults of the nominate subspecies have buff to creamy yellowish white heads, necks, and underparts with a thin dark streak through the eyes. Their back and wings are blackish brown with a whitish patch at the base of the primaries that shows in flight. Their uppertail coverts and tail are buff with dusky bars and the tail has a black band near the end. Their iris is reddish brown surrounded by bare bright yellow skin and their legs and feet are pea green. Immature birds have browner upperparts than adults and their underparts have brown streaks. Subspecies ''M. c. cordata'' is a darker buff on the head and underparts than the nominate and has narrower bars on the tail.
Yellow-headed Caracarra I assume this is an immature Yellow-headed Caracarra as the head is pale. Found in the park fronting San Antonio church in Cali, Colombia. Cali is a very birdy city with 500 species living here or passing through.

 Bird,Cali,Colombia,Milvago chimachima,Yellow-headed Caracarra

Distribution

Subspecies ''M. c. cordata'' is found in southwestern Nicaragua, western Costa Rica, and most of Panama, and in mainland South America from Colombia east through Venezuela and the Guianas, south through Ecuador and Peru east of the Andes, and across Brazil north of the Amazon River. The Nicaragua records are only since 2008, and there are also scattered eBird records as far north as Guatemala and Belize. Off the north coast of the South American mainland, it occurs on Aruba, Trinidad, and Tobago, and has visited Bonaire and Curaçao as a vagrant. The nominate ''M. c. chimachima'' is found from eastern Bolivia south through Paraguay into northern Argentina and east through northern Uruguay and Brazil south of the Amazon River. Its range overlaps with that of the chimango caracara in southern Brazil, northern Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay....hieroglyph snipped...

The yellow-headed caracara is a bird of lightly-treed open landscapes, like savannas with palms and scattered trees, ranchlands and pastures, gallery forests, and the edges of denser forests. In elevation, it mostly ranges from sea level to 1,000 m , though it has been recorded at about 2,500 m in Colombia's Cauca River valley.
Yellow-headed caracara, Uraba, Colombia Found in an agricultural field near the Cotton-top Tamarin Reserve in Uraba, Colombia. This one was very approachable, with no intention to flee. Typically found in the open where it scavenges and kills easy to capture prey. Antioquia,Colombia,Colombia Choco & Pacific region,Fall,Geotagged,Milvago chimachima,South America,Uraba,Urabá,World,Yellow-headed caracara

Status

The IUCN has assessed the yellow-headed caracara as being of Least Concern. It has an extremely large range and an estimated population of at least five million mature individuals that is believed to be increasing. No immediate threats have been identified. It "will certainly move into lowland areas as they are converted from forest to cattle ranches or to small- or to medium-scale farming."
Yellow-headed Caracara Surveying the scene Hato Pinero,Los Llanos,Milvago chimachima,Yellow-headed caracara

Habitat

Subspecies ''M. c. cordata'' is found in southwestern Nicaragua, western Costa Rica, and most of Panama, and in mainland South America from Colombia east through Venezuela and the Guianas, south through Ecuador and Peru east of the Andes, and across Brazil north of the Amazon River. The Nicaragua records are only since 2008, and there are also scattered eBird records as far north as Guatemala and Belize. Off the north coast of the South American mainland, it occurs on Aruba, Trinidad, and Tobago, and has visited Bonaire and Curaçao as a vagrant. The nominate ''M. c. chimachima'' is found from eastern Bolivia south through Paraguay into northern Argentina and east through northern Uruguay and Brazil south of the Amazon River. Its range overlaps with that of the chimango caracara in southern Brazil, northern Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay....hieroglyph snipped...

The yellow-headed caracara is a bird of lightly-treed open landscapes, like savannas with palms and scattered trees, ranchlands and pastures, gallery forests, and the edges of denser forests. In elevation, it mostly ranges from sea level to 1,000 m , though it has been recorded at about 2,500 m in Colombia's Cauca River valley.
Immature Yellow-headed Caracara (Milvao chimachima)  Costa Rica,Geotagged,Milvago chimachima,Summer,Yellow-headed caracara

Reproduction

The yellow-headed caracara's nesting season varies geographically. It spans from December to April in Costa Rica. In Colombia, there appear to be two seasons, January to April and July to September. It includes August in Venezuela. Egg laying has been recorded in May in Guyana, in July and August in central Brazil, and in September in southern Brazil. It usually builds a stick nest up to 15 m high in a tree or palm but has also nested in a tree cavity, and in the absence of trees on mounds in marshy areas, on the ground, and even in buckets and cans on the wall of a house. The clutch size has been reported as one or two eggs and also as four. The incubation period is about 22 days, fledging occurs 17 to 20 days after hatch, and young are dependent on the parents for about three more weeks. The female does most of the incubating but both parents provide the young.


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Songs and calls


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Black and White Hawk-eagle in the Amazon Black and White Hawk-eagle in the Amazon. Bird of prey,Brazil,Geotagged,Milvago chimachima,Yellow-headed caracara,birds

Food

The yellow-headed caracara is omnivorous and relies heavily on scavenging. Its diet includes carrion, insects , crabs, fish, reptiles, amphibians, mammals, bird eggs and nestlings, horse dung, fruits such as those of oil palm , coconut, and maize, and seeds. It also takes ticks from cattle and other large mammals like capybaras and tapirs and enlarges open wounds. Much of its diet is taken while walking on the ground, but it does some hunting on the wing. It has also been observed to forage for small invertebrates in the fur of brown-throated three-toed sloths. Mixed-species feeding flocks apparently do not regard it as a threat, not making alarm calls during encounters.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderFalconiformes
FamilyFalconidae
GenusMilvago
SpeciesM. chimachima