A chough ( ) is any of two species of passerine birds that constitute the genus Pyrrhocorax of the Corvidae (crow) family. These are the red-billed chough ( Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax) and the Alpine chough (or yellow-billed chough) ( Pyrrhocorax graculus). The white-winged chough of Australia, despite its name, is a member of the family Corcoracidae and only distantly related.
The choughs have black plumage and brightly coloured legs, feet and bills and are resident in the mountains and rocky sea-cliffs of southern Eurasia and North Africa. They have long broad wings and perform spectacular aerobatics. Both species pair bond for life and display philopatry to their breeding sites, which are usually caves or crevices in a cliff face. They build a lined stick nest and lay three to five eggs. They feed, usually in flocks, on short grazed grassland, taking mainly invertebrate prey, supplemented by vegetable material or food from human habitation, especially in winter.
Changes in agricultural practices, which have led to local population declines and range fragmentation, are the main threats to this genus, although neither species is threatened globally.
The Alpine chough was described as Corvus graculus by Linnaeus in the 1766 edition of the Systema Naturae. Although Corvus is the crow genus to which the choughs' relatives belong, the English ornithology Marmaduke Tunstall considered the chough to be sufficiently distinct to be moved to the a genus, Pyrrhocorax, which he described in his 1771 Ornithologia Britannica. The genus name is derived from Ancient Greek purrhos (πύρρος, "flame-coloured") and korax (κόραξ]], "Raven, crow").
The fossil record from the Pleistocene of Europe includes a form similar to the Alpine chough, and sometimes categorised as an extinct subspecies of that bird,(Hungarian with English abstract) Válóczi, Tibor (1999) " Vaskapu-barlang (Bükk-hegység) felső pleisztocén faunájának vizsgálata (Investigation of the Upper-Pleistocene fauna of Vaskapu-Cave (Bükk-mountain)). Folia Historico Naturalia Musei Matraensis 23: 79–96 (PDF)Mlíkovský, Jirí (2002) Cenozoic Birds of the World (Part 1: Europe) Ninox Press, Prague. (PDF) and a prehistoric form of the red-billed chough, P. p. primigenius. There are eight generally recognised extant subspecies of red-billed chough, and two of Alpine, although all differ only slightly from the nominate forms. The greater subspecies diversity in the red-billed species arises from an early divergence of the Asian and geographically isolated Ethiopian races from the western forms.
Traditionally, the closest relatives of the choughs have been thought to be the Coloeus and the typical Corvus, but more recent genetic studies have suggested the choughs are basal to a group of Asian jay genera ( Crypsirina, Dendrocitta, Platysmurus, Temnurus), or most recently, basal in the entire Corvidae.
The two Pyrrhocorax are the main hosts of two specialist chough fleas, Frontopsylla frontalis and F. laetus, not normally found on other corvids.
The Australian white-winged chough ( Corcorax melanorhamphos), despite its similar shape and habits, is in a separate family Corcoracidae only moderately related to the Corvidae and not notably to the true choughs, and is an example of convergent evolution.
These birds are mountain specialists, although red-billed choughs also use coastal sea cliffs in Ireland, Great Britain and Brittany, feeding on adjacent short grazed grassland or machair; the small population on La Palma, one of the Canary Islands, is also coastal. The red-billed chough more typically breeds in mountains above in Europe, in North Africa and in the Himalayas. In that mountain range it reaches in the summer, and has been recorded at altitude on Mount Everest. The Alpine chough breeds above in Europe, in Morocco, and in the Himalayas. It has nested at , higher than any other bird species, and it has been observed following mountaineers ascending Mount Everest at an altitude of .
Where the two species occur in the same mountains, the Alpine species tends to breed at a higher elevation than its relative,
The red-billed chough's loud, ringing chee-ow call is similar in character to that of other corvids, particularly the jackdaw, although it is clearer and louder than the call of that species. In contrast, the Alpine chough has rippling and whistled sweeeooo calls quite unlike the crows. Small subspecies of both choughs have higher frequency calls than larger races, as predicted by the inverse relationship between body size and frequency.
Both species lay 3–5 normally whitish eggs blotched with brown or grey, which are incubated by the female alone. The chicks hatch after two to three weeks. Red-billed chough chicks are almost naked, but the chicks of the higher altitude Alpine chough hatch with a dense covering of natal down feather.
The Alpine chough lays its eggs about one month later than its relative, although breeding success and reproductive behaviour are similar. The similarities between the two species presumably arose because of the same strong environmental constraints on breeding behaviour. The first-year survival rate of the juvenile red-billed chough is 72.5 percent, and for the Alpine it is 77%. The annual adult survival rate is 83–92% for Alpine, but is unknown for red-billed.
Plant matter is also eaten, and red-billed chough will take fallen grain where the opportunity arises; it has been reported as damaging barley crops by breaking off the ripening heads to extract the corn. Alpine choughs rely more on fruit and berries at times of year when animal prey is limited, and will readily supplement their winter diet with food provided by tourist activities in mountain regions, including ski resorts, landfill and picnic. Both Pyrrhocorax species feed in flocks on open areas, often some distance from the breeding cliffs, particularly in winter. Feeding trips may cover distance and in altitude. In the Alps, the development of skiing above has enabled more Alpine choughs to remain at high levels in winter.
Where their ranges overlap, the two chough species may feed together in the summer, although there is only limited competition for food. An Italian study showed that the vegetable part of the winter diet for the red-billed chough was almost exclusively Gagea bulbs, whilst the Alpine chough took berries and hips. In June, red-billed choughs fed mainly on caterpillars whereas Alpine choughs ate cranefly . Later in the summer, the Alpine chough consumed large numbers of grasshoppers, while the red-billed chough added cranefly pupae, fly larvae and beetles to its diet. In the eastern Himalayas in November, Alpine choughs occur mainly in Juniper forests where they feed on Juniper berry, differing ecologically from the red-billed choughs in the same region and at the same time of year, which dig for food in the soil of the villages' terraced pastures. (abstract)
The choughs host bird , including two Frontopsylla species, which are Pyrrhocorax specialist. Other parasites recorded on choughs include a cestoda Choanotaenia pirinica,(Russian) and various species of chewing louse in the genera Brueelia, Menacanthus and Philopterus. Blood parasites such as Plasmodium have been found in red-billed choughs, but this is uncommon and apparently does little harm. Parasitism levels are much lower than in some other passerine groups.
Both choughs occupied more extensive ranges in the past, reaching to more southerly and lower altitude areas than at present, with the Alpine chough breeding in Europe as far south as southern Italy, and both the decline and range fragmentation continue. Red-billed choughs have lost ground in most of Europe, and Alpine choughs have lost many breeding sites in the east of the continent. In the Canary Islands, the red-billed chough is now extinct on two of the islands on which it formerly bred, and the Alpine was lost from the archipelago altogether.
The causes of the decline include the fragmentation and loss of open grasslands to scrub or human activities such as the construction of ski resorts, and a longer-term threat comes from global warming which would cause the species' preferred Alpine climate zone to shift to higher, more restricted areas, or locally to disappear entirely.
The red-billed chough, which breeds at lower levels, has been more affected by human activity, and the declines away from its main Alpine breeding areas have seen it categorised as "vulnerable" in Europe. Only in Spain is it still common, and it has recently expanded its range in that country by nesting in old buildings in areas close to its traditional mountain breeding sites.
The red-billed chough was formerly reputed to be a habitual thief of small objects from houses, including burning wood or lighted candles, which it would use to set fire to haystacks or thatched roofs.
As a high altitude species with limited contact with humans until the development of mountain tourism activities, the Alpine chough has little cultural significance. It was, however, featured together with its wild mountain habitat in Olivier Messiaen Catalogue d'oiseaux ("Bird catalogue"), a piano piece written in 1956–58. Le chocard des alpes ("The Alpine Chough") is the opening piece of Book 1 of the work.
A group of choughs may be referred to fancifully or jocularly as a chattering or clattering. (See also: List of collective nouns)
Etymology
Distribution and habitat
Description
The two choughs are distinguishable from each other by their bill colour, and in flight the long broad wings and short tail of the red-billed give it a silhouette quite different from its slightly smaller yellow-billed relative. Both species fly with loose deep wing beats, and frequently use their manoeuvrability to perform acrobatic displays, soaring in the Vertical draft at cliff faces then diving and rolling with fanned tail and folded wings.
+Physical measurements and identificationData from for the nominate subspecies in each case, except for the tarsus and weight measurements for Alpine Chough, which are for P. g. digitatus
!width=36% Feature
! Red-billed chough
! Alpine chough Weight 285–380 g 191–244 g Wing 249–304 mm 250–274 mm Tail 126–145 mm 150–167 mm Tarsus 55–59 mm 41–48 mm Bill 41–56 mm 31–37 mm Bill colour Red Yellow Appearance in flight:
the red-billed chough has deeper primary feather "fingers" and a shorter tail than the Alpine chough.
Behaviour and ecology
Breeding
Feeding
Natural threats
Status
In culture
See also
External links
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