n.
A bird (Caprimulgus carolinensis) of the southern and central United States, resembling but larger than the whippoorwill.
[Imitative of its call.]
Dictionary:
chuck-will's-wid·ow (chŭk'wĭlz-wĭd'ō)
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[Imitative of its call.]
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Caprimulgus carolinensis
SUBFAMILY
Caprimulginae
TAXONOMY
Caprimulgus carolinensis Gmelin, 1789, South Carolina. Mono-typic.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Carolina chuck-will, chuck; French: Engoulevent de Caroline; German: Carolinanachtschwalbe; Spanish: Chotacabras de la Carolina.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
11–23 in (28–33 cm); 3.3–5.2 (94–147 g). Brown, blackish brown, buffish white, and white cryptic coloration. Sexually dimorphic.
DISTRIBUTION
Breeds in eastern and southeastern USA; winters from Florida and West Indies through Central America to Colombia and northern Venezuela.
HABITAT
Woodland and forests. Often sits and calls at night from gravel roads.
BEHAVIOR
Roosts during day; active mainly at dusk and before dawn. Song "chuck willow willah" is basis of English name, the initial "chuck" is often inaudible.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Feeds mainly on insects caught on sallying flights from ground or perch. Occasionally recorded feeding on small birds.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Unlined nest on ground with clutch of two eggs that are cream with dark blotches and spots. Incubation by female for period of around 20 days. Small young are golden-brown, paler beneath. Young can fly when 16–17 days old.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not threatened.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Rarely noticed by humans, except for its distinctive nocturnal song.
| WordNet: chuck-will's-widow |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
large whippoorwill-like bird of the southern United States
Synonym: Caprimulgus carolinensis
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Adult male (upper right) and female (lower left)
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Antrostomus carolinensis |
The Chuck-will's-widow, Caprimulgus carolinensis is a nocturnal bird of the nightjar family Caprimulgidae. It is found in the southeastern United States near swamps, rocky uplands, and pine woods. It migrates to the West Indies, Central America, and northwestern South America.
This bird is sometimes confused with the Whip-poor-will (Caprimulgus vociferus)[1], due to the peculiar and somewhat similar names. Though rather closely related, they are two distinct species however.
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A fairly generic nightjar, it has mottled brownish underparts, a buff throat, reddish-brown feathers lined with black, and brown and white patterning on head and chest, differing from the gray and black of its more common cousin. Males have patches of white on their outer tail feathers. Its size ranges from 11 to 13 inches (28 to 33 cm) long with a 25 inch (62 cm) wingspan, large for a nightjar and like all of them with a short bill and long tail.
Its common name derives from its continuous, repetitive song that is often heard at night. This consist of a series of calls with a vibrating middle note between two shorter notes, not much shifting in pitch. It is slower, lower-pitched and less piercing than the song of the Whip-poor-will. "Chuckwuts-widow" is another common name less often found, but also imitating the rhythm of the bird's calls.
It eats primarily insects, particular those active at night such as moths, beetles, and winged ants. It will also eat small birds, swallowing them whole.[2][3]
Females do not build nests, but rather lay eggs on patches of dead leaves on the ground. The eggs, which are pink with spots of brown and lavender, are subsequently incubated by the female.
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