Validated cleaner: the cuculid bird Crotophaga ani picks ticks and pecks at sores of capybaras in southeastern Brazil

Autores/as

  • Ivan Sazima Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Museu de História Natural, Departamento de Zoologia

Palabras clave:

bird-mammal symbiosis, tick-removing, cleaning behaviour, Hydrochoerus

Resumen

Information on the role of smooth-billed anis (Crotophaga ani) as tick-pickers on mammals remains controversial. I record here these birds removing ticks and pecking at wounds of capybaras (Hydrochoerus hydrochaeris) in a small reserve at Campinas, São Paulo, southeastern Brazil. The birds inspected the mammals’ skin, both in places with and without hair. The hair was parted with bill movements, and ticks were removed by vigorous pulling. The birds also pecked at open or healing sores, from which they extracted small portions of blood clots and dead tissue. The capybaras appeared oblivious to the birds’ activity. Even in the case that the cleaning behaviour is restricted to some bird individuals and populations, or places and periods, this record validates the notion that smooth-billed anis removes ticks from herbivorous mammals.

Publicado

03/01/2008

Cómo citar

Sazima, I. (2008). Validated cleaner: the cuculid bird Crotophaga ani picks ticks and pecks at sores of capybaras in southeastern Brazil. Biota Neotropica, 8(1). Recuperado a partir de //www.biotaneotropica.org.br/BN/article/view/379

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Sección

Communicaciones Cortas

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