Dictionary Definition
oriole
Noun
1 mostly tropical songbird; the male is usually
bright orange and black [syn: Old World
oriole]
2 American songbird; male is black and orange or
yellow [syn: New World
oriole, American
oriole]
User Contributed Dictionary
Translations
An Oriolidae bird of the Old World
- French: loriot
- Russian: иволга /ívolga/
- Serbian: zlatka
- Spanish: oropéndola
Extensive Definition
The orioles are a family, Oriolidae, of Old World
passerine birds. The family comprises the
Figbird
Sphecotheres viridis, the only member of the genus Sphecotheres,
and the Old
World orioles in the genus Oriolus. Several
other genera have been proposed for to split the genus Oriolus, for
example the African black-headed species are sometimes split into
Baruffius. The family is not related to the New World
orioles, which are Icterids, family
Icteridae. The family is distributed across Africa, Europe, Asia
down into Australia. The few temperate nesting species are migratory,
and some tropical species are show some seasonal movements.
The orioles and Figbirds are medium sized
passerines, around 20–30 cm in length, that exibit little sexual
dimorphism in size (females are slightly smaller). The beak is slightly curved and hooked
and as long again as the head, although Figbird is distinct from
the orioles by virtue of having a smaller bill. The plumage of most species is
bright and showy, although in many species there is sexual
dichromism with the females have duller plumage than the males. The
plumage of the Figbird is duller than that of the Oriolus orioles.
The plumage of many Australiasian orioles mimics that of the larger
friarbirds (a genus of
large honeyeaters),
this is thought to be mimicry evolved to reduce aggression against
the smaller orioles.
Orioles are arboreal and tend to feed in the
canopy.
Many species are able to survive in open forests and woodlands, a
few are restricted to closed forest. They are omnivores , taking principally
fruit, berries and arthropods, but opportunistically taking other
prey as well.
Orioles are monogamous, breeding in
territorial pairs (although Figbirds breed in loose colonies).
Nesting sites may be chosen near aggressive species such as
drongos, shrikes or friarbirds, which
confer a degree of protection. The nest is a deep
woven cup suspended like a hammock from a branch. As many as six
eggs may be laid, but 2-3 is the more usual number.
References
- Walther B. & P. Jones (2008) "Family Oriolidae (Orioles and Figbirds). Excerpt from upcoming book. Handbook of the Birds of the World. Volume 13 Accessed: 11 April 2008.
- Diamond J (1982) "Mimicry of friarbirds by orioles" The Auk 99(2): 187-196 http://elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Auk/v099n02/p0187-p0196.pdf
External links
- Oriole videos on the Internet Bird Collection
oriole in Afrikaans: Wielewaal
oriole in German: Pirole
oriole in Erzya: Ожопуло
oriole in Spanish: Oriolidae
oriole in Esperanto: Orioledoj
oriole in French: Oriolidae
oriole in Korean: 꾀꼬리과
oriole in Ossetian: Бурцъиу
oriole in Lithuanian: Volunginiai
oriole in Hungarian: Sárgarigófélék
oriole in Dutch: Wielewalen en vijgvogels
oriole in Japanese: コウライウグイス族 (Sibley)
oriole in Norwegian Nynorsk: Pirolfamilien
oriole in Polish: Wilgi
oriole in Portuguese: Oriolini
oriole in Russian: Иволговые
oriole in Simple English: Oriole
oriole in Finnish: Kuhankeittäjät
oriole in Swedish: Gyllingar
oriole in Vietnamese: Họ Vàng anh
oriole in Turkish: Sarıasmagiller
oriole in Ukrainian: Вивільгові
oriole in Chinese: 黄鹂科