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<td>Animalia <tr><td>Phylum:<td>Chordata <tr><td>Class:<td>Aves <tr><td>Order:<td>Coraciiformes <tr><td>Family:<td>Bucerotidae </table> <tr><th bgcolor=pink>Genera <tr><td> Aceros
Anorrhinus
Anthracoceros
Buceros
Bucorvus
Ceratogymna (=Bycanistes)
Ocyceros
Penelopides
Tockus </table>
Red-billed Hornbill(Tockus erythrorhychus)
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Red-billed Hornbill
(Tockus erythrorhychus)

Hornbills (Family Bucerotidae) are a group of birds whose bill is shaped like a cow's horn, but without a twist, sometimes with a casque on the upper mandible. Frequently, the bill is brightly coloured.

Both common English and scientific name of the family refer to the shape of the bill, "Buceros" being "cow horn" in Greek.

The Bucerotidae Family includes 57 species, 9 of them endemic of the Southern part of Africa. During incubation, the female lays up to six white eggs locked within the nest cavity, made of mud, droppings and fruit pulp. There is only one narrow aperture, big enough for the male to transfer food to the mother and the chicks.

When the chicks and the female are too big to fit in the nest, the mother breaks out and rebuilds the wall, then both parents feed the chicks. In some species the chicks themselves rebuild the wall unaided.

Most are arboreal birds of dense forest, but the large Ground Hornbills, as their name implies, are terrestrial birds of open savanna. Their distribution ranges from Africa south of the Sahara, tropical Asia, Philippines and Solomon Islands.

Hornbills are omnivorous birds, eating fruit, insects and small animals.

In the Sibley-Ahlquist taxonomy, Hornbills are separated from the Coraciiformes, which also includes kingfishers, bee-eaters and rollers as a separate order Bucerotiformes.

Some species have different plumages for each sex. The blue throat of the Abbysinian Ground Hornbill pictured here shows it to be an adult female.

Order Coraciiformes


References

Gordon Lindsay Maclean - Robert's Birds of South Africa, 6th Edition


Hornbill is also the magazine of the Bombay Natural History Society. This society's icon is a Great Indian Hornbill sitting on a branch.

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<tr><td align="center">Image:Hornbill.jpg
Abyssinian Ground Hornbill
(Bucorvus abyssinicus)
<tr><th bgcolor=pink>Scientific classification <tr><td>

Hornbill

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This page was last modified 09:48, 14 Aug 2004.
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