Notes on the breeding biology of birds in riverine floodplains of western Amazonia
Author
Melo, Tomaz Nascimento de
Author
Greeney, Harold F.
text
Bulletin of the British Ornithologists’ Club
2019
2019-03-15
139
1
56
64
journal article
298442
10.25226/bboc.v139i1.2019.a4
3e79f978-cb64-470c-8db5-e0c8e2ee192e
2513-9894
11637630
4FE6D333-CC9F-466B-A736-38F5F31A6
WHITE-BELLIED SPINETAIL
Mazaria propinqua
On
17 February 2011
, HFG observed an adult spinetail carrying food to a nest at the Ecuadorian locality described above. Three days later, while examining the nest, a single fledgling flew from its entrance and disappeared into a nearby tangle of vegetation. On 24 February he collected the nest and made the following observations. The nest was an enclosed, globular mass of dry vegetative material, entered via a laterally oriented tube, and sited
60 cm
above ground. It was supported from below by three nearly horizontal crisscrossed stalks of
Gynerium
cane and many smaller stems and leaf blades. Overall, the nest was 300 Although a photo on Wikiaves illustrates a nest, also found on an island in the Madeira in December (
R
. S. Moreira; https://www.wikiaves.com.br/1561495), and two pairs were reported to be constructing nests on an island in the Branco River, northern
Brazil
, in mid October (
Naka
et al
. 2007
), ours are the first descriptions of this species’ nest (
Schulenberg
& Rosenberg 2016), which is similar to that of related species of
Furnariidae
(
Zyskowski
& Prum 1999). The Ecuadorian nest fledged during the dry–wet season transition in that region (
Blake & Loiselle 2012
). The active nests in July and December indicate that the species breeds both early and late in the wet season along the Madeira River.