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Agami heron
Agami heron
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Agami heron
Adult in Costa Rica
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Pelecaniformes
Family: Ardeidae
Subfamily: Ardeinae
Genus: Agamia
Reichenbach, 1853
Species:
A. agami
Binomial name
Agamia agami
(Gmelin, 1789)
Global range

The agami heron (Agamia agami) is a medium-sized heron. It is a resident breeding bird from Central America south to Peru and Brazil. It is sometimes known as the chestnut-bellied heron, and is the only member of the genus Agamia. In Brazil it is sometimes called Soco beija-flor, meaning 'hummingbird heron', thanks to its unique coloration pattern.[2]

The agami heron is listed as Near Threatened by the IUCN, due to predictions of future habitat destruction within its range.[1]

Taxonomy

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The agami heron was formally described in 1789 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae. He placed it with the herons and cranes in the genus Ardea and coined the binomial name Ardea agami.[3] Gmelin based his description on the "Agami heron" from Cayenne that had been described in 1785 by the English ornithologist John Latham in his book A General Synopsis of Birds.[4] Latham had in turn based his description on a specimen owned by the army officer Thamas Davies and the description and illustration of "Le Héron Agami" by the French polymath Comte de Buffon in his Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux.[5][6] The agami heron is now the only species placed in the genus Agamia that was introduced in 1853 by the German naturalist Ludwig Reichenbach.[7][8] The name agami is the word for Grey-winged trumpeter that's used by the indigenous people of French Guiana.[9] The species is monotypic: no subspecies are recognised.[8]

Description

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In Bolivia

This uncommon species is 66–76 centimetres (26–30 inches) in length. It is short-legged for a heron, and has a thin bill which is considerably longer than the head. The neck and underparts are chestnut, with a white line down the centre of the foreneck, and the wings are shiny green. Wispy pale blue feathers decorate the crown, sides of the foreneck, and lower back. The legs, bill, and bare facial patch are dull yellow. During the breeding season the facial patch can change color to reddish. The sexes are similar, but juveniles are largely brown above with a white foreneck, and streaked brown-and-white underparts. The normal clutch size is two blue eggs.[citation needed]

The species has a 15 cm long bill, which has been described as extremely long, allowing it to strike prey from greater distances from its body than similarly sized heron species sporting shorter bills.[10]

Distribution and habitat

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Juvenile, in Brazil

The agami heron is a Neotropical species occurring in Central and South America. The distribution area of the species extends from south-east Mexico through central and Caribbean Central America through the Amazon basin in South America, covering the following countries: Mexico, Guatemala, Belize, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, French Guiana, Suriname, Guyana, Venezuela, Peru, Bolivia and Brazil.

This species is rare in open areas. The agami heron's habitat encompasses swamp forests, mangroves, forest streams and freshwater wetlands. They mostly occur at elevations between sea level and 300 metres (1,000 feet), although records exist from as elevations as high as 2,600 metres (8,500 feet) in the Andes. They nest in both single species and mixed species colonies on platforms of sticks in bushes and trees over water. Very few colonies are known to date but some are quite large, up to hundreds or even over a thousand nests.[11] The following locations of colonies are known within the distribution area of the species:on a tiny island at the centre of a lagoon in the middle of the Pacuare Nature Reserve, Costa Rica, in the Tapiche Reserve, Peru, the Marais de Kaw-Roura National Reserve and Amazonian National Park, French Guiana, and other colonies outside of protected areas in Colombia, Mexico and Belize.[12]

Behavior

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Chicks

Despite its stunning plumage, this reclusive species' preference for shade and overhanging vegetation means that it is rarely seen. This is a quiet bird, but pairs and family groups may make various snoring or rattling sounds. Rattling sounds and slow walking away are a typical response to disturbance.[13]

Agami herons stalk their prey (fish, frogs, small reptiles, and snails) in shallow shaded water in forested areas. They often stand still on perches or directly in the water, or moving very slowly.[13] They rarely wade in open water. At Cocha Cashu, a 1985 study found that 52% of their prey during the late dry season consisted of characids, particularly Triportheus angulatus and Astyanax sp., which are surface-swimming fishes. Prey mostly measured 2-10 cm in length. Less commonly, they have also been known to consume cichlids (Aequidens).[10][14]

Several courtship behaviors have been described and are used by both sexes.[13] Lores can change color to an intense red, and both sexes show a short-lived silver crest.

Conservation

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This species is very discreet and scientifically little known, which is a challenge for conservationists. Its remote habitat and secretive behavior may explain its apparent rarity. However, it is considered as near threatened by the IUCN Red List due to future habitat loss in the Amazon.[1] Conservation efforts should concentrate on protection of important colony sites, developing a better understanding of the range, habitat needs and biology of the species.[12]

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Agami heron (Agamia agami), also known as the chestnut heron, is a medium-sized, secretive wading bird belonging to the heron Ardeidae, renowned for its striking and elusive nature in dense tropical forests. Measuring 60–76 in length with a of about 100 and weighing 475–580 g, it features a bluish-black face, a long pale blue crest, a chestnut-brown body, electric blue neck feathers, and glossy green upperparts, making it unmistakable among ; juveniles are duller brown and attain full adult coloration by their third year. Native to the Neotropics, the Agami heron inhabits lowland primary forests, swampy margins of streams and lakes, seasonal marshes, mangroves, and forested wetlands, primarily below 300 m elevation but occasionally up to 2,600 m in . Its range spans from eastern southward through (including , , , , , and ) and into northern , encompassing , , , , , , , , and north and central , with an extent of occurrence of approximately 13,300,000 km². The species is generally scarce and localized, favoring undisturbed, dense vegetation near water bodies where it forages solitarily in a crouched stance, preying mainly on small such as characins and cichlids (2–20 cm in length), supplemented by amphibians and . Breeding occurs colonially in large rookeries of up to 900 nests during the (June–September), with pairs serially monogamous and laying clutches of 2–4 light blue eggs in platform nests built in trees or shrubs; chicks in 2–3 weeks and become independent after 6–7 weeks. The Agami heron is typically silent but produces low-pitched calls, including alarm notes, and exhibits territorial during mating. Its basal phylogenetic position within Ardeidae underscores its evolutionary distinctiveness among . Classified as Near Threatened by the IUCN as of 2023, the Agami heron faces declining populations estimated at 10,000–25,000 mature individuals, driven by habitat loss from (projected 20–29% decline over three generations due to degradation), , disturbance from human activities like motorboating, and potential effects on water levels. Conservation efforts include protection within reserves such as Kaw-Roura National Natural Reserve in and a 2015 emphasizing habitat safeguarding, population monitoring, and disturbance reduction; in 2024, the Agami Heron Working Group was re-initiated with 18 participants to advance these efforts, though comprehensive surveys remain needed.

Taxonomy and systematics

Etymology and history

The Agami heron was first formally described in scientific literature by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in 1789, who placed it in the genus Ardea and coined the binomial name Ardea agami in the 13th edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae. Gmelin's description drew upon earlier accounts, including John Latham's 1785 reference to the "Agami Heron" in his General Synopsis of the Birds and Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon's depictions in Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux (1770–1783), which originated from a specimen collected in Cayenne, French Guiana. These early European descriptions built on indigenous knowledge, with Buffon using terms like "Héron Agami de Cayenne" and "Crabier agami de Cayenne," reflecting local nomenclature from the region. The name "agami" derives from a Amerindian term used by indigenous people of for a forest bird, possibly referring to the grey-winged trumpeter (Psophia crepitans) due to similarities in their vocalizations. This underscores the heron's elusive, forest-dwelling nature and its integration into local cultural references, as noted in pre-binomial accounts by figures like François-Nicolas and Edouard d'Aubenton in their 1765–1781 illustrations titled "Agami de ." The name's adoption highlights how European ornithologists incorporated indigenous terms to describe Neotropical , though its precise linguistic roots remain tied to Amerindian languages like those of the Cayenne region. In 1853, German ornithologist Heinrich Gustav Reichenbach elevated the species to its own monotypic genus Agamia in his Avium Systema Naturale, distinguishing it from other herons based on morphological traits. Early literature often confused the Agami heron with other species, leading to alternative French designations like "Héron pourpré" (purple heron) or "Crabier marron" (chestnut bittern), which blurred its identity with more familiar or bittern-like forms. These misidentifications arose from limited specimens and variable descriptions, contributing to its enigmatic status in 18th- and 19th-century .

Classification and relationships

The Agami heron (Agamia agami) is classified within the family Ardeidae, the , and represents the only species in the monotypic Agamia, with no recognized . This placement stems from its distinct morphological features, including an extremely long bill relative to body size, short legs, and an elongated neck, which set it apart from other and justify its separation into a unique . Historically considered part of the Ardeinae alongside typical like Ardea and Egretta, recent taxonomic revisions have elevated it to its own , Agamiinae, based on both morphological divergence and molecular evidence. Phylogenetic analyses using ultraconserved nuclear elements (UCEs) and have resolved the Agami heron's position as a deeply divergent lineage within Ardeidae, consistently placed as sister to the combined of Ardeinae (day and egrets) and Botaurinae (bitterns). This placement underscores its ancient evolutionary history, with phylogenomic studies covering approximately 70% of confirming Agamia as sister to the of Ardeinae and Botaurinae, following more basal lineages such as Tigrisomatinae and Cochleariinae. Earlier analyses, such as those using the COI gene, first highlighted its distinctiveness, while more comprehensive datasets have ruled out close affinities to typical and instead suggest potential shared primitive traits with other basal groups like the boat-billed (Cochlearius cochlearius) in subfamily or tiger herons (Tigrisomatinae), though Agamia forms an independent lineage.

Physical characteristics

Morphology and measurements

The Agami (Agamia agami) is a medium-sized with a total length of 60–76 cm. It weighs 475–580 g, with little in size, though females are slightly smaller than males. The possesses a thin, straight bill that averages 14 cm in length but can reach up to 16.3 cm, making it disproportionately long relative to the body and comprising about one-fifth of the total length. The neck is elongated and snake-like, enabling effective lunging strikes during prey capture. Its legs are comparatively short and colored yellowish to olive-green, facilitating stealthy stalking through dense undergrowth. These structural features, particularly the short legs and long bill, represent key adaptations for foraging in vegetated shallow waters, where the heron probes and strikes at such as cichlids. The overall morphology supports its reclusive lifestyle in lowland forests, with providing in such habitats.

Plumage and variations

The Agami heron (Agamia agami) exhibits a striking and ornate in adulthood, characterized by a neck and underparts accented by a central white stripe bordered in black on the upper , transitioning to slate-grey on the lower with shaggy, sickle-shaped silvery-blue plumes. The upperparts feature a glossy green back and upperwing coverts, while the wings and tail display dark with subtle brown streaking; the crown is pale blue, adorned with elongated, ribbon-like feathers forming a prominent crest up to 125 mm long. The facial skin includes yellow lores and orange orbital skin, with the bill greenish-yellow to bluish with a dark tip. Juveniles possess a more subdued plumage, with drab brown upperparts that are blacker on the crown and back, a white foreneck with narrow vertical streaks of white and brown on the throat, and streaked buff underparts featuring black and buff markings on the lower breast. The crest is shorter and less developed, the irises are grey-white, and the facial skin is dull greenish-yellow with a dusky band across the lores, while the legs are greenish-yellow to greyish-green. In the second year, plumage resembles the adult but with less extensive neck plumes and cinnamon-mottled underparts. During the breeding season, variations include an intensified red coloration on the lores, progressing through pink-cream intermediate stages, and the development of broad slaty-blue plumes on the lower back, with legs shifting from yellow-olive to black and then grey. Males display these wispy light-blue crest feathers more prominently than females, though both sexes share the overall pattern. The Agami heron undergoes an annual molt cycle, but detailed studies are lacking; juveniles gradually transition toward adult plumage, achieving full coloration by the third year.

Range and ecology

Geographic distribution

The Agami heron (Agamia agami) is a resident species with a breeding range extending from southeastern , specifically eastward from , through —including , , , , , and —and into northern , where it occurs in , , , , , , , and . This distribution also encompasses , resulting in a presence across 16 countries in total. Core populations are concentrated in the Amazon and basins, where the species is locally common in suitable areas, though overall densities remain low and patchy due to its secretive nature. The extent of occurrence spans approximately 13,300,000 km², reflecting a broad but discontinuous footprint tied to forested systems across these regions. In terms of elevation, the Agami heron primarily occupies lowlands below 300 m, with records extending up to 2,600 m in the eastern Andean foothills of . There are no confirmed beyond this established range, and the distribution appears stable, albeit localized and subject to ongoing pressures from alteration.

Habitat requirements

The Agami heron primarily inhabits swamp forests, flooded woodlands, mangroves, and slow-moving forest within tropical lowlands below 300 meters . These environments provide the dense, shaded essential for concealment and , with the species showing a strong preference for areas near water bodies under thick canopies while avoiding open marshes and exposed wetlands. Nesting occurs in colonies situated in trees or bushes over water, often under dense forest cover to protect against predators. Known sites include a colony along the Pacuare River in Costa Rica, where up to 266 nests have been documented on a small lagoon island, and larger aggregations at the Tapiche Reserve in Peru, in flooded forest lagoons. In French Guiana, significant breeding activity takes place in the Marais de Kaw-Roura National Nature Reserve, where satellite-tracked individuals revealed home ranges centered on marshy wetlands supporting rookeries of varying sizes. Colony sizes can reach up to 900–1,000 nests in optimal conditions, typically on platforms of sticks 2–3 meters above water. The species exhibits limited tolerance for altered habitats, relying on the integrity of primary forests and showing vulnerability to in the , where projected habitat loss ranges from 18.6% to 25.6%. It is a year-round resident across its range but times breeding to wet seasons, with nesting peaking from May to in response to flooding that enhances food availability and site accessibility.

Behavior and life history

Foraging and diet

The Agami heron employs a stealthy foraging strategy, stalking prey in shallow, shaded waters along forested streams and ponds. It often stands motionless or moves slowly in a deep crouch, with its neck and body flattened horizontally against the water surface to remain concealed, before delivering precise strikes with its long, straight bill. This solitary hunting occurs primarily under dense vegetation cover, where the bird rarely ventures into open areas, and no group foraging has been observed. The diet consists mainly of small , which form the bulk of its intake by volume, supplemented by amphibians, small reptiles, crustaceans, insects, and snails. In a study at , , observed prey items ranged from 2 to 10 cm in length, with characids such as Triportheus angulatus and Astyanax spp. comprising 52% of captures, alongside cichlids like Aequidens spp. The heron's long bill and neck adaptations enable accurate strikes in murky, vegetated waters, targeting surface-swimming or near-shore . Foraging activity is diurnal, concentrated in shaded habitats during the day, with birds sometimes active at dawn or dusk in denser cover; individuals may travel considerable distances from nesting sites to .

Breeding and reproduction

The Agami heron breeds primarily during the across its Neotropical range, with regional variations; for instance, nesting occurs from March to July in and from June to September in and Trinidad. In some areas, such as , breeding within colonies is highly asynchronous, allowing for extended use of nesting sites. Courtship displays are performed by males at potential nest sites and emphasize distinctive and soft-part coloration, including raising a short-lived silver crest, stretching the neck, head-bobbing, bill-snapping, and body rocking in a " and Bow" manner. Females participate in pair formation while retaining intense red lores, and both sexes use at least 13 behaviors; vocalizations include low-pitched, frog-like grunts and rattling calls. Agami herons are serially monogamous, with males defending nesting territories. Nesting is colonial, often in mixed-species groups with other , and occurs in trees or bushes 5–15 m above water under dense canopy cover. Nests consist of loose platforms of sticks, measuring about 15–30 cm in diameter and 8 cm deep. Colonies can be substantial, with one exceptionally large site in hosting approximately 900 pairs, far exceeding prior records. The clutch comprises 2–4 unmarked pale blue eggs, laid asynchronously to reduce predation risk. Incubation requires 25–28 days and is shared by both parents, who also shade the eggs during daylight hours. Chicks are altricial, covered in down upon hatching, and receive biparental care, including brooding for 1–2 weeks and provisioning via regurgitation; parents may forage up to 100 km from the , often at night. Young after 2–3 weeks but remain dependent on parents until 6–7 weeks of age; the exact fledging period is poorly known and may exceed 28 days, and chick survival rates are low due to predation with limited data on overall breeding success.

Conservation

Status and threats

The Agami heron (Agamia agami) is classified as Near Threatened on the , based on assessments indicating a decreasing trend driven by ongoing habitat pressures across its range. The global is estimated at 10,000–25,000 mature individuals, though this figure may underestimate the true number due to the ' secretive habits and challenges in surveying remote wetlands; the is suspected to be undergoing moderately rapid declines. Primary threats to the Agami heron stem from and degradation, particularly accelerating in the Amazon and basins for logging, livestock ranching, and agricultural expansion, which fragments forested wetlands essential for and breeding. Water from upstream activities further degrades aquatic habitats, while climate change-induced alterations in water levels—such as rising floods—can lead to colony abandonment and reduced prey availability in swamps and marshes. The ' low population density heightens its vulnerability to these widespread losses. Localized impacts include disturbance to breeding colonies from activities, such as traffic and noise, which can disrupt nesting in secluded lagoons. Mining operations in tropical lowlands exacerbate , though direct effects on the heron remain understudied. No major threats from disease or have been documented, with available emphasizing anthropogenic habitat changes as the dominant risks. Projections based on deforestation models suggest a potential 18.6–25.6% loss of suitable in the , particularly in unprotected areas, though populations appear stable within designated reserves.

Protection and research

The Agami heron (Agamia agami) is classified as Near Threatened on the , with a decreasing population trend projected to decline by 20-29% over the next three generations due to ongoing habitat loss and degradation. Conservation efforts prioritize the protection of nesting colonies, which are essential for the ' reproduction, as the heron forms large, site-specific rookeries in swampy forests. Key protective measures include the establishment of dedicated reserves and monitoring programs. For instance, the Agami Island in designates a 30-hectare focused on the heron's , incorporating regular assessments, breeding success tracking, and community outreach to mitigate threats like runoff and from agriculture. Similarly, protected areas such as the Kaw-Roura Reserve in provide safeguarded environments, helping to buffer against and human disturbances like noise. The 2015 Agami Heron Conservation Action Plan, developed by the Agami Heron Working Group under the IUCN Heron Specialist Group, outlines strategies for colony site protection across the species' range in Central and , emphasizing the identification and safeguarding of additional rookeries to prevent disturbance during breeding seasons. Research on the Agami heron has intensified since the formation of the Agami Heron Working Group in 2015, which coordinates multi-national efforts to inventory nesting sites and study migration patterns, revealing long-distance movements that underscore the need for transboundary protections; the group was re-initiated in 2024 with 18 members. At the Pacuare Reserve in , ongoing studies since the early monitor nesting abundance and reproduction in the largest known colony between and ; these efforts use non-invasive methods like blinds to assess densities and cycles without disrupting breeding. In , the Belize Foundation for Research and (BFREE) has conducted nesting observations since 2016 at Bladen Nature Reserve, collecting data on egg-laying timing (late June to early July), parental care, predation risks, and nest reuse, with annual reports contributing to the Working Group's database for broader ecological insights. Future research priorities, as highlighted in the conservation plan, include expanded surveys to quantify population sizes, detailed ecological studies on requirements, and monitoring of impacts, which have already reduced cover by 9% across the heron's range over the past two decades. Collaborative initiatives, such as sharing sightings via platforms like eBird, further support these efforts by mapping distributions and identifying new colonies for protection.

References

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