Setophaga cerulea (Wilson, 1810)
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.15560/16.5.1375 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/A65E6110-FFEC-FFED-FF3C-F83BC2BEFC3E |
treatment provided by |
Marcus |
scientific name |
Setophaga cerulea (Wilson, 1810) |
status |
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Setophaga cerulea (Wilson, 1810) View in CoL
New records. One male perching on Sambucus sp. in
the growing native forest of the ESNR (04°56′52″N, 073°57′47″W) on 14 January 2016. One male foraging near Eucalyptus sp. in the exotic forest in the ESNR (04° 56′59′N, 073°57′22″W) on 17 January 2019. We recorded this species in systematic surveys on 17 January 2017.
Identification. Adult males with cerulean blue dorsal region, blackish wings with two white wing bars; back striated with black; white ventral region with narrow black pectoral collar and blackish striatum on the sides. Female and immature with olive-green back and blue on the crown; narrow superciliary and two white wing bars; opaque white ventral region with dark brown striatum on the lateral sides.
Remarks. We did not record any reproductive events. This species is a boreal migratory bird. It is categorized as Near Threatened (BirdLife International 2019). This species has undergone a population decline of 72% over the last 44 years in North America ( Rosenberg et al. 2016).
Distribution. Eastern USA and Central America, Panama, northern Venezuela, northern and central Colombia, Ecuador, Peru, and northern Bolivia.
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