Species: Petrochelidon pyrrhonota

Cliff Swallow
Species

    This swallow has a buffy rump, short square tail, dark throat, dark cheek, pale collar, and usually a white forehead. Length 14 cm, wingspan 34 cm.

    Kingdom
    Animalia
    Phylum
    Craniata
    Class

    Aves

    Order

    Passeriformes

    Family

    Hirundinidae

    Genus

    Petrochelidon

    Classification
    Other Global Common Names
    Andorinha-do-Penhasco, Andorinha-Costas-Castanhas - Golondrina Risquera, Golondrina de Rabadilla Parda - hirondelle à front blanc
    Informal Taxonomy
    Animals, Vertebrates - Birds - Perching Birds
    Formal Taxonomy
    Animalia - Craniata - Aves - Passeriformes - Hirundinidae - Petrochelidon - breeds from southwestern Utah, lower Colorado River valley to Baja California east to southwestern Texas (Brown and Brown 1995).

    This swallow has a buffy rump, short square tail, dark throat, dark cheek, pale collar, and usually a white forehead. Length 14 cm, wingspan 34 cm.

    Short General Description
    A swallow.
    Migration
    false - false - true - Rare migrant in the West Indies (Raffaele 1983). Migrates through Costa Rica late August or early September to late October and early March to late May (Stiles and Skutch 1989). Uncommon and sporatic fall transient in Colombia, mainly early September to mid-October; fewer records of migrants in spring (April-May) (Hilty and Brown 1986). Present in South America mainly September-April (Ridgely and Tudor 1989).
    Non-migrant
    false
    Locally Migrant
    false
    Food Comments
    Primarily insectivorous; feeds on beetles, flying ants, wasps, grasshoppers, mosquitoes, etc. Feeds often on small swarming insects. Sometimes eats berries (e.g., of junipers). Forages usually within 0.5 km of colony, but sometimes up to several km away.
    Reproduction Comments
    Completely new nests of cliff swallows are built over a period of 3 to 27 days (often a week or two). Egg laying may occur as early as early April in Texas and California, early May in Nebraska and Idaho, late May in Illinois, Massachusetts, and Pennsylvania, and early June in Arizona. At higer elevations in the mountains, most egg laying probably occurs in June. In southern Arizona, most eggs are laid in July with the onset of the summer monsoon. The peak of laying in Nebraska is in late May and early June. Clutch size is 2-6 (usually 3-5). Incubation lasts an average of 13-14 days. Young are tended by both parents, can fly at 20-26 days, may return to nest for the first 2-3 days after fledging. In most populations, the young have fledged by the end of July or slightly later in the mountains and southern Arizona. Young are dependent on parents for food for 3-5 days after fledging, after which they may be fed occasionally for several additional days.<br><br>Cliff swallows usually produce one brood per year, a few have a second brood (Turner and Rose 1989; Gauthier and Thomas 1993a. Breeding activity within a colony is closely synchronized (Silver 1995). Prolonged rains or dry weather may reduce breeding success or postpone nesting.<br><br>Nesting occurs in colonies of up to 1,000+ pairs (average is a few hundred). <br><br>Researchers in Nebraska found that cliff swallow residents within a colony frequently lay eggs in neighboring nests. Sometimes cliff swallows move eggs laid in their own nest to a nearby nest (by carrying the egg in the bill).
    Ecology Comments
    Gregarious at all seasons. Periodically populations may decline drastically due to prolonged spring or summer rains and reduced food availability (Terres 1980). Parasitic swallow bug (<i>Oeciacus vicarius</i>) sometimes is abundant enough to reduce reproductive success in large colonies.
    Length
    14
    Weight
    22
    NatureServe Global Status Rank
    G5
    Global Status Last Reviewed
    1996-12-02
    Global Status Last Changed
    1996-12-02
    Other Status

    LC - Least concern

    Conservation Status Map
    <img src="http://www.natureserve.org/explorer/servlet/GetMapGif?CA.AB=S5&CA.BC=S4&CA.MB=S5&CA.NB=S3&CA.NF=__&CA.NT=S4&CA.NS=S3&CA.NU=SNR&CA.ON=S4&CA.PE=SH&CA.QC=S4&CA.SK=S5&CA.YT=S5&US.AL=S4&US.AK=S5&US.AZ=S5&US.AR=S4&US.CA=SNR&US.CO=S5&US.CT=S3&US.DE=S1&US.DC=SH&US.FL=__&US.GA=S3&US.ID=S5&US.IL=S5&US.IN=S3&US.IA=S5&US.KS=S4&US.KY=S3&US.LA=S4&US.ME=S5&US.MD=S3&US.MA=S2&US.MI=S5&US.MN=SNR&US.MS=S3&US.MO=S4&US.MT=S5&US.NN=S5&US.NE=S5&US.NV=S5&US.NH=S3&US.NJ=S3&US.NM=S5&US.NY=S5&US.NC=S3&US.ND=SNR&US.OH=S3&US.OK=S5&US.OR=S5&US.PA=S5&US.RI=SH&US.SC=SNR&US.SD=S5&US.TN=S4&US.TX=S4&US.UT=S5&US.VT=S4&US.VA=S3&US.WA=S5&US.WV=S3&US.WI=S5&US.WY=S5" alt="Conservation Status Map" style="width: 475px; height: auto;" />
    Global Range
    H - >2,500,000 square km (greater than 1,000,000 square miles) - H - Breeding range extends from western and central Alaska, northern Yukon, northern Mackenzie, Saskatchewan, northern Manitoba, Ontario, southern Quebec, New Brunswick, and Nova Scotia south to Baja California and central Mexico, western Texas, Arkansas, Tennessee, western Virginia, southeastern Pennsylvania, western Connecticut and northeastern Massachusetts (Brown and Brown 1995). Accidental records from coastal Siberia, southern Greenland, and the British Isles (Brown and Brown 1995). During the nonbreeding season, the range extends from from southern Brazil and possibly southeastern Paraguay south to southcentral Argentina, with several records as far south as Tierra del Fuego and Falkland Islands (Brown and Brown 1995), and occasionally north at least to Costa Rica.
    Global Range Code
    H
    Global Range Description
    >2,500,000 square km (greater than 1,000,000 square miles)
    ELEMENT_GLOBAL.2.101677