Chivi vireo


The chivi vireo is a small South American songbird in the family Vireonidae. It was formerly considered as a subspecies of the red-eyed vireo. There are 9 subspecies of the chivi vireo. The vireo is usually green to yellow-green in color with off white underparts, and a gray crown. It has a whitish supercilium extending over its ear coverts, and its lores are dull gray in color.
It is found throughout most of northern, eastern and central South America, only being absent from Chile and southern Argentina. It inhabits multiple types of habitat across its range, and appears to adjust well to slightly disturbed habitat. It is mainly resident, but at least two of the subspecies inhabiting the south of its range are known to be migratory.
It mates May-June or October-January depending on the region and subspecies. They make cup nests and lay eggs in clutches of 2-4. Eggs are incubated by the female and take 10-16 days to hatch. Nestlings take 10-13 days to fully develop.
The majority of the bird's diet is composed of arthropods, although some subspecies eat fruit and some are also thought to be nectarivorous.

Taxonomy

The chivi vireo was described by the French ornithologist Louis Vieillot in 1817 and given the binomial name Sylvia chivi. The specific epithet is an onomatopoeia. Vieillot based his description on that for the "Gaviero" by the Spaniard Félix de Azara that had been published in 1802. Ornithologists treated the chivi vireo as a subspecies of the red-eyed vireo but unlike the red-eyed vireo that migrates to North America, the chivi vireo remains in South America to breed and does not migrate. Based on a molecular phylogenetic study published in 2017 that found significant genetic differences and little introgression, the chivi vireo was promoted to species status.
There are 9 subspecies:
The species looks similar to the related red-eyed vireo and yellow-green vireo. It is in length, with the mass and length of the bill and wings varying in different subspecies.
Hatchlings are born almost naked with yellow skin and sparse down. Juveniles have brownish or tawny upperparts, with the greater and median coverts having brownish-green tips, and the head showing a less contrasting pattern than adults. The mouth lining is paler than adults up until 6 months of age. They may also show molt contrast on their wings.
Adult vireos are very similar, except in the subspecies diversus, where the female is smaller than the male. The crown is medium gray with thin but well defined gray borders, with a whitish supercilium extending above the ear coverts. The lores are a dull gray, and the nape, along with the side of the neck and the rest of the upperparts being a dull olive green. The area below the eyes is off-white in color. The wing coverts are dull gray brown, edged with olive green. The rectrices are green-gray in color, and have bright green edges. The undertail is very pale. The throat, breast, and belly are off-white or grayish-white in color, with a greenish tinge to the flank and sides of the breast. The upper mandible of the beak varies in color from black to blackish brown or a dusky gray, with the mandible being pale to blue-gray in color with a dark tip and paler base. The iris is brown in color, although it varies in shade from pale brown to reddish brown. The legs are pale brown to pale gray in color.

Calls

The calls of the species are typical of most of Vireo, but it apparently has a very simple repertoire with only one song and one vocalization. Its song is a pattern of brief musical sound with pauses in between. The song of the South American subspecies is typically "chew-lee chew-lew wee-chee chew leee", while the song of griseobarbatus is a "tche-wit... tche-wut" repeated constantly during the breeding season. solimoensis is said to have a shorter and more repetitive song, while the song of the migratory populations in the south of the range is said to more complex than that of resident subspecies. In Bolivia, the song is said to be composed of "chee’wee? chee’wip" repeated. The principal call is a raspy "zheer", or a more nasal "jeeyr", with the warning call being "gweh" or "greh".

Ecology and Behavior

The species is largely resident throughout its range, but in the south of its range, the subspecies chivi and diversus are known to be migratory. There are also some subspecies that are likely to undertake short migrations.

Diet and foraging

The species is primarily an insectivore, but some populations are known to consume fruit, and they may be important seed dispersers for some plants. It mainly consumes arthropods, especially caterpillars and other insect larva. However, they have been recorded consuming fruits of Myrsine coriacea, Rapanea lancifolia, Myrsine ferruginea, Trichilia spp., Cabralea canjerana, Talauma ovata, Davilla rugosa, Nectandra megapotamica, Byrsonima sericea, Miconia minutiflora, Cupania emarginata and oblongifolia, Zanthoxylum rhoifolium, Trema micrantha, Alchornea glandulosa, and Pera glabrata. It is thought to be an important seed disperser for Cabralea canjerana. It is also suspected of being nectarivorous.

Reproduction

The species nests in the austral spring in the south of its range, and in the middle of the year in the north. The populations in Venezuela, Tobago, and Colombia nest in May–June, while the populations of the nominate subspecies in Peru have been seen nesting in November. Brazilian populations are thought to nest in October-January.
Nests of vividior are generally built in a cup shape out of grass, vegetable fibers, and small amounts of plant down in a tree fork, while nests of griseobarbatus are cup-shaped structures built out of dry weeds, vines, and bark and lined with black lichen, feathers, and seed down. The nests of griseobarbatus had an external height and depth of 50 mm and 77 mm, with an internal height and depth of 31 mm and 52 mm.
Eggs are laid in clutches of 2-4 eggs at a time. Eggs vary in appearance and size between different subspecies. The mean size of eggs in griseobarbatus is reported to be, while that size of eggs in Brazil is, and the size of eggs in Argentina being. The mass of eggs measured in southeastern Brazil was.
Eggs of vividior are white with some blackish spots on the larger end of the egg. Eggs of griseobarbatus are said to be white with sparse and faint markings. Eggs in eastern Brazil have been described as white. The eggs in northeastern Argentina have been described as being white and having gray or fine chestnut markings and dark lines which were concentrated at the larger end. The incubation period of the eggs is reported as being between 10-16 days. Only females incubate the eggs. The nests are probably parasitized by shiny cowbirds. Eggs might also be eaten by snakes as one nest in Ecuador was observed being predated on by a snake. The nestling period is 10-13 days, and young are dependent on parents for a while after they have fledged.

Distribution and habitat

This bird is very widespread across most of northern, eastern, and central South America, with the exception of Chile and southern Argentina. Resident populations of the chivi vireo occur across northeastern Columbia, into Venezuela and the entirety of the Guianas into eastern Brazil. They also occur alongside many rivers in Amazonia, continuing into parts of Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador, with some resident populations inhabiting western Colombia. More migratory populations are found in south and southeastern Brazil, Paraguay, Bolivia, and Uruguay, along with the northern areas of Argentina. In the non-breeding season these populations travel north as far as Venezuela, eastern Colombia, eastern Ecuador, and eastern Peru.
It inhabits the canopy and subcanopy of dry, humid and wet forests, along with borders, light woodland, restinga, gallery forest in cerrado, dense scrub, small groves of trees, and secondary growth. It inhabits semi-deciduous, várzea and secondary forests in Peru, ascending into montane valleys in the south. In central Amazonian Brazil, the bird is not commonly found in mature forests, with these habitats being inhabited by migrant red-eyed vireos. It has been recorded up until in Bolivia and in Peru, but is usually only found up until in Colombia and Brazil, and up until in Ecuador.

Status

The species is relatively common and widespread across its large range, and seems to have a stable population. Also, its acceptance of disturbed habitat seems to increase its chances of survival.