Overview
Comprehensive Description
Description
The males has the bright-yellow background color, the black with yellowish spots wings and tail. The female most often has the yellowish-green upper parts, greenish-grey wings, and the yellowish-white with longitudinal strikes under parts. The females' coloring is very variable; some females look brightly as males. Juveniles are similar on females but have darker under parts. First year males also are similar on females but more yellow on the breast and abdomen, more contrast on tail.
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Physical Description
Size
Size
Length: 25 cm. Weight 50-90 g. Wing length: 14,5-16,1 cm. Wingspan: 45 cm.
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Ecology
Habitat
Habitat
It inhabits the deciduous flood plains and riparian forest, groves, gardens and old forest-belts on plains.
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Life History and Behavior
Behavior
Behaviour
It eats the insects and spiders found mostly on trees' crowns, especially rather eats caterpillars, additional food is berries.
It migrates singly or in small groups. Pairs breed quite far one from another. Both parents build the nest on the branches fork (on poplar, birch, willow and very rarely on pine) on 10-15 meters. Bast-made nest is lined by thin grass. Clutches of three to five (more often of four eggs) are laid on mid May – mid June. For 13-15 days mainly female incubates, male feeds it and sometimes help it to incubate. Both parents feed juveniles, which fledge after 14-15 days, at the end of June – mid July. Autumn migration begins in early August; birds fly out singly or in flocks of one-two dozen birds. The majority of the birds migrate on the end of August – early September. Latest migrants recorded in early October.
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Life Expectancy
Lifespan, longevity, and ageing
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Molecular Biology and Genetics
Molecular Biology
Barcode data: Oriolus oriolus
There are 9 barcode sequences available from BOLD and GenBank. Below is a sequence of the barcode region Cytochrome oxidase subunit 1 (COI or COX1) from a member of the species. See the BOLD taxonomy browser for more complete information about this specimen and other sequences.
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Download FASTA File
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Statistics of barcoding coverage: Oriolus oriolus
Public Records: 9
Species: 12
Species With Barcodes: 1
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Conservation
Conservation Status
IUCN Red List Assessment
Red List Category
Red List Criteria
Version
Year Assessed
Assessor/s
Reviewer/s
Contributor/s
Justification
History
- 2008Least Concern
- 2004Least Concern
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Trends
Population
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Wikipedia
Eurasian Golden Oriole
The Eurasian Golden Oriole or simply Golden Oriole (Oriolus oriolus) is the only member of the oriole family of passerine birds breeding in northern hemisphere temperate regions. It is a summer migrant in Europe and western Asia and spends the winter season in the central and southern Africa.
Golden orioles have an extremely large range with large populations that are apparently stable. Therefore, they are evaluated as least concern by BirdLife International.[1]
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Characteristics
The male is striking in the typical oriole black and yellow plumage, but the female is a drabber green bird. Orioles are shy, and even the male is remarkably difficult to see in the dappled yellow and green leaves of the canopy.
In flight they look somewhat like a thrush, strong and direct with some shallow dips over longer distances.
The New World orioles are similar in appearance to the Oriolidae, but are icterids unrelated to the Old World birds.
Distribution and habitat
The breeding range of this species spans from Portugal, Spain and France across the United Kingdom and Scandinavia to Poland, Russia, the Balkans, Turkey and West Asia to the Caucasus up to Mongolia and China. They winter in central and southern Africa.[1] They generally migrate during the night, but may travel during the day in the spring migration. During the fall migration they migrate via the Eastern Mediterranean where they feed on fruit; they are often considered a pest in this region because of this.[2]
The Eurasian Golden Oriole inhabits a range of habitats. In Western Europe they prefer open broadleaf forests and plantations, copses, riverine forest, orchards, large gardens; in Eastern Europe they may inhabit more continuous forest as well as mixed or coniferous forests. They generally avoid treeless habitats but may forage there. In their wintering habitat they are fond in semi-arid to humid woodland, tall forests, riverine forest, woodland/savanna mosaic and savanna.[2]
Ecology and behaviour
They feed on insects and fruit. They build neat nests in tree forks and lay 3-6 eggs.
Their call is a screech like a jay, but the song is a beautiful fluting weela-wee-ooo or or-iii-ole, unmistakable once heard.
Taxonomy and systematics
Until a few years ago this species was treated as being conspecific with the Indian Golden Oriole.[3]
Etymolgy
The name "oriole" was first used in the 18th century and is an adaptation of the scientific Latin genus name, which is derived from the Classical Latin "aureolus" meaning golden. Various forms of "oriole" have existed in Roman languages since the 12th and 13th centuries.[4] Albertus Magnus used the Latin form oriolus in about 1250 and erroneously stated that it was onomatopoeic because of the Golden Oriole's song.
References
- ^ a b c BirdLife International (2009). "Oriolus oriolus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2010.4. International Union for Conservation of Nature. http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/146762.
- ^ a b Walther, B.; Jones, P. (2008), "Family Oriolidae (Orioles)", in J., del Hoyo; A., Elliott; D. A., Christie, Handbook of the Birds of the World. Volume 13: Penduline-tits to Shrikes, Barcelona: Lynx Edicions, pp. 692–723, ISBN 978-84-96553-45-3
- ^ Jønsson, K. A., Bowie, R. C. K., Moyle, R. G., Irestedt, M., Christidis, L., Norman, J. A., Fjeldsa, J. (2010). "Phylogeny and biogeography of Oriolidae (Aves: Passeriformes)". Ecography 33 (2): 232–241. doi:10.1111/j.1600-0587.2010.06167.x. http://www.nrm.se/download/18.25ba04a21296cc434f980005871/J%C3%B6nsson+et+al+Oriolidae.pdf.
- ^ OED Online. Accessed 9 Feb 2008
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