Don't want to see ads? Sign up...





Species icon
Blue-and-yellow Tanager

Rauenia bonariensis
(Gmelin, JF, 1789)
Naranjero
Sanhaçu-papa-laranja

Family: Thraupidae
Order: Passeriformes
Class: Aves
Phylum / Division: Chordata
Kingdom: Animalia

 Request change
Filters

Records from Parque Provincial Chancaní

Conservation status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Synonyms: Thraupis bonariensis, Rauenia bonariensis, Loxia bonariensis, Pipraeidea bonariensis.

Subspecies:


Common Names: Orange Tanager, Seven-colored Tanager.

Subspecies:

Thraupis bonariensis bonariensis: (J. F. Miller, 1789), nominal subspecies, found in southern Brazil, Uruguay, and Argentina (east of the country, down to southern Buenos Aires).
Thraupis bonariensis schulzei: (Brodkorb, 1938), found in southeastern Bolivia, western Paraguay, and western Argentina (south of Mendoza, up to northern Río Negro).
Thraupis bonariensis compositai: (J. T. Zimmer, 1944), found only in Bolivia.
Thraupis bonariensis darwiniii: (Bonaparte, 1838), found in the Andes of Ecuador, Peru, eastern Bolivia, and northern Chile.

Description: 17 cm. Males are very striking, with a violet-blue cap, a black back, lore, and tail, and a yellow-orange chest and rump. Some feathers of the same color as the cap appear on the primaries. The female has a simpler design, being brown with a darker back and lighter underside. Juveniles are very similar to females but show early signs of the cap they will develop as adults. Among juveniles and adults, it is common to find numerous intermediate plumages. The species is pursued as a cage bird, which has reduced its population in recent times.

Sexual Dimorphism: Present, very marked and clearly distinguishable in the field.

Habitat: Dense mountains, dry shrublands, fruit plantations, rural areas, savannas, and settlements.

Geographical Distribution: Brazil, Paraguay, Bolivia, Uruguay, Peru, Chile, Ecuador, and Argentina.

Behavior: Seen in pairs or small groups, it is a shy bird that does not frequent the ground and usually stays in the tree canopy looking for food.

Nesting: Begins building in early spring, forming a cup-shaped nest with plant fibers, located high in a tree where foliage is abundant. It lays three to four white eggs with brown speckles and spots.

Feeding: It feeds on seeds, fruits, and insects.

Author of this description: Diego Oscar

 See related literature




Loading map...




Last published photographs

Foto
Photography ID: 591726
  Adult

Parque Provincial Chancaní
Córdoba
Argentina
04/23/2024
Silvio Lamothe
Foto
Photography ID: 519549
  Adult

Parque Provincial Chancaní
Córdoba
Argentina
11/10/2022
Silvio Lamothe
Foto
Photography ID: 471163
  Adult

Parque Provincial Chancaní
Córdoba
Argentina
09/10/2021
Guillermo Marcaida
Foto
Photography ID: 443067
  Adult

Parque Provincial Chancaní
Córdoba
Argentina
03/28/2021
Silvio Lamothe
Foto
Photography ID: 407220
  Adult

Parque Provincial Chancaní
Córdoba
Argentina
03/02/2014
Vicente Piccirillo
Foto
Photography ID: 361654
  Adult

Parque Provincial Chancaní
Córdoba
Argentina
11/08/2019
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 328832
  Adult

Parque Provincial Chancaní
Córdoba
Argentina
04/19/2019
Diego Carus
Foto
Photography ID: 320211
  Juvenile

Parque Provincial Chancaní
Córdoba
Argentina
03/03/2019
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 289526
  Adult

Parque Provincial Chancaní
Córdoba
Argentina
09/29/2018
Jorge Schlemmer
Foto
Photography ID: 45111
  Adult

Parque Provincial Chancaní
Córdoba
Argentina
03/02/2014
Alec Earnshaw



 View all photographs of the species




 Add a photography of this species





Last Vocalizations published




 Add an audio of this species





Last Filmings published




 Add a film of this species





 Reports


 Detail of places sorted by number of records








Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
213787427/07/2024ArgentinaCórdobaParque Provincial Chancaní2Diego Oscar
211126023/04/2024ArgentinaCórdobaParque Provincial ChancaníSilvio Lamothe
195718109/01/2024ArgentinaCórdobaParque Provincial Chancaní1Dario Juan Wendeler
194353809/01/2024ArgentinaCórdobaParque Provincial Chancaní2Andres Espindola
191909514/10/2023ArgentinaCórdobaBase de campamento y senderos, Parque Provincial Chancaní16Enrique Chiurla
191904814/10/2023ArgentinaCórdobaRuta Provincial 51, Parque Provincial Chancaní2Enrique Chiurla
190642314/10/2023ArgentinaCórdobaBase de campamento y senderos, Parque Provincial Chancaní16Victor Hugo Michelini
190574714/10/2023ArgentinaCórdobaRuta Provincial 51, Parque Provincial Chancaní2Victor Hugo Michelini
179430513/05/2023ArgentinaCórdobaParque Provincial Chancaní6Pablo Eguia
169647110/11/2022ArgentinaCórdobaParque Provincial ChancaníSilvio Lamothe
Page 1

 Add a record of this species




Bibliography related


Artículo De la Peña, M. R. 1999. Aves Argentinas, Lista y Distribución. 244 págs. LOLA. Buenos Aires.

Artículo Doiny Cabré, C. y R. Lejarraga. 2007. Aves de Sierra de la Ventana. 128 pp. Bahía Blanca. Buenos Aires. Argentina.

Artículo Narosky, T. y D. Yzurieta. 2010. Aves de Argentina y Uruguay – Birds of Argentina & Uruguay: Guía de Identificación Edición Total – A Field Guide Total Edition. 16a ed. 427 págs. Vázquez Mazzini Editores. Buenos Aires. Argentina.

Artículo Narosky, T. Y P. Canevari. 2007. Cien Aves Argentinas. Editorial Albatros. 1a ed. 2a reimp. 128 págs. Buenos Aires. Argentina.

Artículo Raggio, J. Y R. Guller. 2011. Aves Pampeanas. 176 pags. Sempe Ediciones. Buenos Aires. Argentina.



Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Blue-and-yellow Tanager (Rauenia bonariensis) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 29/03/2026.