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Overview
Darwin's nothura

Darwin's nothura

Wikipedia

Darwin's nothura is a type of tinamou commonly found in high-altitude grassland in the southern Andes in South America.

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Distribution

Region

Southern Andes

Typical Environment

Occurs in high-altitude Andean grasslands and steppe, especially puna and shrubby bunchgrass habitats. It favors open, stony slopes and valleys with scattered cover, using tussocks and low shrubs for concealment. The species may venture into fallow fields and pasture edges but remains close to natural cover. Ground roosting and nesting sites are typically well hidden among dense grasses.

Altitude Range

1800–4000 m

Climate Zone

Highland

Characteristics

Size24–27 cm
Wing Span38–45 cm
Male Weight0.25 kg
Female Weight0.28 kg
Life Expectancy7 years

Ease of Keeping

Beginner friendly: 2/5

Useful to know

Darwin's nothura is a small ground-dwelling tinamou of the southern Andes, where it blends into tussock grass with superb camouflage. Like other tinamous, males incubate clutches that may contain eggs from multiple females and then lead the chicks after hatching. It flies only in short, explosive bursts, preferring to run and freeze when threatened.

Gallery

Bird photo
Bird photo
Bird photo
Darwin's nothura in Argentina

Darwin's nothura in Argentina

Behaviour

Temperament

secretive and wary

Flight Pattern

short rapid wingbeats with explosive flushes, then brief glides

Social Behavior

Usually solitary or in pairs outside the breeding season, sometimes in small loose groups in good cover. Nests are shallow ground scrapes hidden in grasses. Breeding is polygynandrous; males incubate and brood precocial chicks. Family groups remain close to cover and rely on stillness and camouflage when disturbed.

Migratory Pattern

Resident

Song Description

Gives low, plaintive, whistled notes that carry across open grasslands, often in the early morning and evening. Calls are simple, spaced whistles used for contact and territorial advertisement.

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