Chestnut-mandibled Toucan (Ramphastos swainsonii)
Spanish name: Dios-te-de, Toucan de Swainson

Chestnut-mandibled Toucan Photo - Costa Rica Chestnut-mandibled Toucan Photo - Costa Rica

About the Chestnut-mandibled Toucan of Costa Rica

Habitat
This large frugivore lives in the canopy of lowland and highland wet forests.

Range

The total range for this bird includes the area between eastern Honduras and northern Colombia. In Costa Rica it is most common in the wet forest lowlands of the Caribbean slope up to 1,200 m; on the Pacific side it is common to abundant between the lowlands (up to1,850 m) along the Cordillera de Talamanca up to Carara.

National Parks

La Selva, Carara National Park, Tortuguero National Park, Cahuita National Park, Corcovado National Park, Sirena Biological Station.

Physical Description/Interesting Biology
The largest toucan in Central America, the Chestnut-mandibled Toucan, is a prominent member of its habitat. These large, brightly marked birds call to each other in piercing tones, especially in the morning, and small flocks can create a boisterous commotion from their conspicuous perches. Groups of about 20 will travel together through and forage in the canopy, semi-open areas, or clearings with remaining tall trees. Closer to nightfall, flocks congregate at tall emergent trees or tall dead snags and call together.

Aside from the male's larger size, the two sexes look alike: a black body bibbed in bright yellow, a white rump, and red on the underside of its tail feathers. The distinctly shaped and bicolor bill is brown and yellow, huge and curved. Although the Chestnut-mandibled Toucan may appear similar to the Keel-billed Toucan, the Chestnut-mandibled has a deeper yellow bib, is somewhat larger, and dominates the Keel-billed at fruiting trees. Additionally, the Chestnut-mandibled does not live in the seasonal dry forests of Guanacaste, where the Keel-billed is found. Toucans have large bills that are hollow, lightweight, and dexterous, enabling the birds to snatch fruit or prey without hazarding a leap onto branches too small for the toucan's weight.

Bright plumage in birds is often related to courtship or territorial behaviors, but copulation for these birds notably lacks any sort of display, precursor, or ritual, and the entire process lasts less than 5 seconds. The mating pair, however, stays together for the season, and forage and parent together. They make their nest in tree cavities in living or dead trees, or in old woodpecker holes for 2 to 3 eggs, and raise the chicks together.

A male will also feed his mate fruit, and they will preen each other. Even after breeding stops, a male will allow only his mate to forage in "his' section of a fruiting tree. Their foraging cooperation is more extensive: often a male arrives first at a tree, and the female follows him soon thereafter; he leaves before all the fruit is eaten, and she finishes it while he moves to the next tree. This strategy of dominating two trees at once helps both of them gain more food, because most other birds leave toucans arrive. The Chestnut-mandibled may also chase the Keel-billed Toucan out of water-filled hollows that they use for bathing and drinking.

This toucan has an important ecological role as a seed disperser for certain trees such as Virola; if, however, an individual tree produces many fruits at once, the toucan may stay nearby and eat a lot from it, and does not disperse the seeds. The Chestnut-mandibled Toucan is usually visible in the canopy, but sometimes needs to search through the understory or on the forest floor for small animals to round out their diet.

Diet
This toucan eats a variety of fruit, including different seeds, berries, drupes, arilloids, and fruit fleshes. They will also take insects or small snakes, and hunt for birds' eggs, nestlings, and lizards.

Height/Weight

Adult females are generally 52 cm long and weigh 580 g; males are 56 cm and weigh 750 g.

Brief Taxonomy
Order: Piciformes
Family: Ramphastidae

Sources
H. F. Howe in: Janzen, Daniel H. Costa Rican Natural History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983.
Henderson, Carrol L. Field Guide to the Wildlife of Costa Rica. University of Texas Press, Austin, 2002.
Skutch, Alexander F. and F. Gary Stiles. A Guide to the Birds of Costa Rica. Utica: Cornell University Press,1989.
Stiles, F. G. in: Janzen, Daniel H. Costa Rican Natural History. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983.
Kricher, John. A Neotropical Companion: an introduction to the animals, plants, and ecosystems of the New World tropics. Princeton University Press: Princeton, NJ, 1997.

Costa Rica locations where the Chestnut-mandibled Toucan can be viewed

Aviarios del Caribe Reserve ~ Cahuita National Park ~ Carara National Park ~ Corcovado National Park ~ Hitoy-Cerere Biological Reserve ~ Irazu Volcano National Park ~ La Selva Reserve and Biological Station ~ Sirena Biological Station ~ Tortuguero National Park

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Chestnut-mandibled Toucan Photos

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