Blue Manakin
Liz Bonnin presents the advancing, leaping and queuing male blue manakin of Brazil.
Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship with them, from around the world.
Liz Bonnin presents the advancing, leaping and queuing male blue manakin of Brazil. Male blue manakins are small, blue and black birds with scarlet caps. They live in the forests of south-east Brazil and neighbouring areas of Argentina and Paraguay. Whilst their plumage is eye-catching, their mating display is one of the strangest of any bird. A dominant male Blue Manakin enlists the support of one or more subordinate males. Calling loudly, all the males sidle along a branch towards the female, taking turns to leap into the air and then fly back down and take their place at the back of the queue. This sequence of advancing, leaping and queuing occurs at a frenetic pace, until, without warning, the dominant male calls time on this avian dance-off, with a piercing screech.
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Blue Manakin [aka Swallow-tailed manakin] (Chiroxiphia caudata)
Webpage image courtesy of Luiz Claudio Marigo / naturepl.com.
NPL Ref 01317997 © Luiz Claudio Marigo / naturepl.com
Recording of swallow-tailed manakin (blue manakin) by Paul A Schwartz / Ref: ML 71592
This programme contains a wildtrack recording of the swallow-tailed manakin kindly provided by The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology; recorded by Paul A Schwartz on 11 Nov 1971, in Estacao Biologica de Boraceia, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
Broadcasts
- Tue 16 Dec 201405:58BBC Radio 4
- Mon 16 Nov 201505:58BBC Radio 4
- Sun 22 Nov 201508:58BBC Radio 4
- Thu 6 Jun 201905:58BBC Radio 4
- Sun 30 Aug 202008:58BBC Radio 4
- Fri 2 Sep 202205:58BBC Radio 4
Podcast: Planet Puffin
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