Showing posts with label Great Antshrike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Great Antshrike. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Additional Trinidad Birds

Here are five photos of five Trinidad birds, which I am posting because of the "unusual" nature of the birds, at least unusual compared to what I usually see around home. The photos themselves are not of the quality that I would like, but I think they will convey something of the avian diversity I on the island.

First, the most beautiful, and unusually colored, woodpecker that I have ever seen - the Chestnut Woodpecker. The drumming of this bird was heard all day from the veranda. I finally found it in the late afternoon working on some bamboo not far from the trail. I managed a few shots before it disappeared. I did not hear or see it during the remaining four days of our stay at Asa Wright ....


The Boat-billed Flycatcher looks like a Great Kiskadee (common on Trinidad) which has pumped up its beak and body with steroids ...


Antshrikes are a group of birds that are new to me. The two I saw were ground feeders, and secretive - tough to see - tougher to photograph. This male Great Antshrike was sort of cooperative ...


From the veranda we saw parrots fly over quite often, and occasionally pause in a tree top. The close pauses were reported to me. A more distant pause occurred the first morning on a  snag. Two Blue-headed Parrots are on the left, An Orange-winged Amazon is on right ...


... and finally, Trinidad's only toucan, the Channel-billed Toucan. The parrots left, to be replaced by the toucan on our first morning. Other times when this bird showed itself, it was much moreore distant. Once it chose a near-by branch but was back lit (alas).Still, toucans somehow seem like  symbols of the tropical rain forest, and I am glad I had a few opportunities to nod toward the icon.


Good birding!

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