Motmots are restricted to woodland or forest in the Neotropics, and the largest diversity is in Middle America. They have a colorful plumage and a relatively heavy bill. All except the tody motmot have long tails that in some species has a distinctive racket-like tip. These paddle-like ends of the tail are formed by barbs of the two central fall feathers that are weakly attached and fall off due to abrasion with substrates and during routine preening. This creates a distinctive racket shape to the tail. Motmots often move these long tails back and forth in a wag-display that signals to a predator that it has been detected. This signal provides a benefit to both the motmot and the predator: the display prevents the motmot from wasting time and energy fleeing, and the predator avoids a costly pursuit that is unlikely to result in capture.
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Image by Becky_Matsubara
Motmots eat small prey such as insects, spiders, centipedes, earthworms, and lizards. Most motmots will also eat fruit. They usually pluck prey from vegetation while flying but may also capture flying insects such as butterflies and dragonflies on the wing. They will also catch prey that is on the ground.
Like most of the Coraciiformes, motmots are cavity nesters. In this case the motmots create tunnels in earth banks, Both parents share in the excavation process of the approximately 1 to 2 meter long tunnel. Their feet are used to loosen the soil and to kick it along the tunnel to the entrance where an excavation mound accumulates.The tunnels are often curved, some even have right angle turns, to try to discourage predators such as snakes and lizards. Similarly, some species try to camouflage the entrance, The tunnel widens at the end where the eggs are deposited, incubated, and the chicks stay until fledging. There are about four white eggs which hatch after about 20 days, and the young leave the nest after another 30 days.
The motmot family Momotidae belongs to the Coraciiformes order, as do the
bee-eaters of family Meropidae, the
kingfishers of family Alcedinidae, the
rollers of families Brachypteraciidae and Coraciidae, and the
todies of family
Todidae.
Genus Aspatha - 1 species
Motmot,_Blue-throated Aspatha gularis
Image by: 1)
Nick Athanas - Mexico 2)
Adrian_Tween - Guatemala 3)
Jorge_Montejo - Mexico
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Genus Baryphthengus
Both species have a long tail, a black mask, and a plumage that is mainly green and rufous.
Motmot,_Rufous Baryphthengus martii
Image by:
1) Dominic
Sherony 2, 3)
Nick Athanas - Panama, Ecuador 4)
Andy_Reago-Chrissy_McClarren - Costa Rica
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Motmot,_Rufous-capped Baryphthengus ruficapillus
Image by: 1)
Claudio_Timm - Brazil 2)
Carlos_Henrique - Brazil 3)
Luiz_Carlos_Rocha - Brazil 4)
Hector_Bottai - Brazil
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Genus Electron
These two species have wider bills than other genera. The "rackets" on their tales may be absent.
Motmot,_Broad-billed Electron platyrhynchum
Image by: 1)
Francesco_Veronesi - Costa Rica 2)
Fotografia_Azul_Profundo 3) Nick Athanas - Ecuador 4)
Alex_Proimos - Costa Rica
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Motmot,_Keel-billed Electron carinatum Found: Central America
Image by: 1)
Dominic
Sherony 2)
Francesco_Veronesi - Costa Rica 3) Jorge_Arroyo - Costa Rica 4)
Alan_Harper - Honduras
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Genus Eumomota - 1 species
Motmot,_Turquoise-browed Eumomota superciliosa
Image by: 1)
Jerry
Oldenettel - Costa Rica 3)
Alastair
Rae 3)
Katja Schulz - Mexico 4)
Michael_Klotz - Nicaragua
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Genus Hylomanes - 1 species
Motmot,_Tody Hylomanes momotula
Image by: 1)
Mdf - Panama 2)
Nick Athanas - Costa Rica 3)
Dominic_Sherony
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Genus Momotus
All but one of these species used to be considered subspecies of the blue-crowned motmot. These six closely related species are: Amazonian motmot, Andean motmot, blue-capped motmot, Lesson's motmot, Trinidad motmot, and whooping motmot. They mostly have in common a black crown center surrounded by a blue band, a mask, and a long tail with rackets, The blue-capped motmot has a completely blue crown.
Motmot,_Amazonian Momotus momota
Image by: 1)
Dave_Curtis - Brazil 2) Luciano_Bernardes - Brazil
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Motmot,_Andean Momotus aequatorialis
Image by: 1)
Alejandro Tamayo 2)
Dave Curtis - Columbia 3) Nick Athanas - Columbia 4)
Alejandro_Bayer_Tamayo - Columbia
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Motmot,_Blue-capped Momotus coeruliceps Found: eastern Mexico
Image by: 1) Juan_Miguel_Artigas_Azas 2)
Roberto_González
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Motmot,_Lesson's Momotus lessonii Found: Mexico, Central America
Image by: 1)
Nick Athanas - Costa Rica 2)
Michelle_Reback - Costa Rica 3)
Dominic_Sherony- Belize
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Motmot,_Russet-crowned Momotus mexicanus
Image by: 1)
Francesco_Veronesi - Mexico 2)
Amy_McAndrews - Mexico 3)
Nick Athanas - Mexico 4)
Len Blumin - Mexico
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Motmot,_Trinidad Momotus bahamensis
Image by: 1)
Stephan_Turner - Tobago 2)
Cheesy42 - Tobago 3)
Allan_Hopkins
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Motmot,_Whooping Momotus subrufescens
Image by: 1)
Nick Athanas - Panama, Columbia, Ecuador 4)
Sergey_Pisarevskiy - Columbia
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There are five species in the tody family, Todidae, and they all belong to the Todus genus.They are very small ( 10 to 11.5 cm long and 5 to 7 grams), chunky, short-tailed birds, with green upperparts, a red throat, yellow under-tail coverts, and a long, flattened bill. They are found in the Caribbean.
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Image by Doug_Greenberg
Todies mainly eat grasshoppers, crickets, beetles, bugs, butterflies, bees, wasps, and ants. They also eat spiders, millipedes, and fruit. They perch on a low, small branch from which they scan the upper-sides and, occasionally, uppersides of leaves for insects. When spotted they will swoop down or up, respectively to catch the insect. The smaller insects are swallowed in air while the larger ones are smashed against twigs before consumption. They occasionally take prey on the ground via a downward flight or may hop after it. In order of preference the prey locations they prefer are: leaves, trunks, branches and twigs, air; and the ground,
bee-Eatersof family Meropidae, the
kingfishers of family Alcedinidae, the
motmots of family Momotidae, and the
rollers of families Brachypteraciidae and Coraciidae.
Genus Todus
Tody,_Broad-billed Todus subulatus
Image: 1)
Carlos_De_Soto_Molinari 2)
ZankaM - Dominican Republic )
Ron Knight
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Tody,_Cuban Todus multicolor
Image by:
1, 2) Charles_Sharpe 3)
Francesco_Veronesi
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Tody,_Jamaican Todus todus
Image by: 1)
Dominic_Sherony 2)
Charles_J_Sharp 3)
Ron_Knight
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Tody,_Narrow-billed Todus angustirostris
Image by: 1)
Ron Knight 2) Gil_Ewing
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Tody, Puerto Rican Todus mexicanus
Image by:
1, 2, 3) Dick Daniels - Puerto Rico
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