The Birds of Colombia

Majestic raptors, iridescent hummingbirds, extravagant toucans, multicolored tanagers — impossible to present them all as they are so numerous.

Here is a selection of the most iconic birds of Colombia that you might encounter during your explorations — their distinctive features, their habitat, and some anecdotes to recognize and watch them, without being a seasoned ornithologist.

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Colombia’s Iconic Birds: A Selection of the Most Representative

Some birds of Colombia that might just surprise you along the way.

THE RAPTORS

Colombia is home to some of the most impressive raptors in the world — from the king of the Andean heights to the most formidable predator of the canopy.

The Andean Condor – Vultur gryphus

Andean condor - C Señor Hans - Colombia
Credit: C Señor Hans

An exceptional glider, with absolute mastery of thermal currents.

What does it look like?

With a wingspan that can reach 3.3 meters, the Andean condor is the largest bird of prey and one of the largest flying birds in the world. Its longevity is remarkable (over 50 years).

In adulthood, its black plumage is enhanced by a collar of white feathers and broad light bands under the wings. The head, bare and bright red, and a hooked beak complete an immediately recognizable silhouette.

The male is distinguished by a crest and skin folds around the neck. The female is smaller; juveniles are gray-brown.

Where does it live in Colombia?

Fewer than 150 individuals remain in Colombia — a rare and very localized presence.

The condor thrives in large open spaces at high altitudes (above 3,000 meters): páramos, volcanic cliffs, snow-covered massifs, where the thermal currents are strong.

It is occasionally found in the Colombian Andes — notably in Puracé, Los Nevados and El Cocuy —, as well as, more rarely, in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta.

What sets it apart

National symbol and central figure of Andean mythology, the Andean condor plays an essential role as a “cleaner” in the balance of its ecosystem by feeding on large carcasses.

He can go several days without eating after a meal, cover hundreds of kilometers per day by gliding, and take long sun baths, his wings spread.

Monogamous and faithful for life, he courts his female with elaborate dances and nests on inaccessible ledges. The young stay with their parents for nearly two years.

The Harpy Eagle – Harpia harpyja

Credit: Juan Camilo Quintero @foto_sintesiss_

The most powerful eagle in the world.

What does it look like?

The harpy eagle is a massive eagle with a dark gray back and wings, a white belly, and a wide black band across the chest. The female is noticeably larger than the male.

Its gray head is topped with a double crest of feathers that it displays when alert, giving it an intimidating appearance.

Its piercing yellow gaze, hooked beak, and oversized talons, with terrifying gripping strength, leave no doubt about its formidable predator qualities.

Where does it live in Colombia?

This bird from Colombia nests and hunts in the large, dense, and remote lowland tropical forests away from any human presence.

In Colombia, it is mainly found in the Amazon, in the Chocó, and in certain areas of the Llanos.

The destruction of its habitat is gradually pushing it towards the most remote areas. Observing a harpy in the wild remains a rare experience, even for a seasoned ornithologist.

What sets it apart

The harpy eagle gets its name from the Harpies of Greek mythology — those half-woman, half-bird creatures with formidable talons. A name that suits it perfectly.

It hunts silently, perched for hours in the canopy, before swooping down on monkeys and sloths at over 80 km/h — its short, broad wings allowing it to weave between trees with prodigious agility.

Monogamous and faithful, the pair reuse the same nest for years, often over 30 meters in height.

Its presence is a reliable indicator of health: where harpies live, the forest is intact.

The Black Vulture – Coragyps atratus

Credit: @danielecheperez

An unloved, rather unsightly, and yet very useful creature.

What does it look like?

The Black Vulture measures 60 to 70 cm and has a wingspan of about 1.50 m.

The plumage is entirely black, with slightly iridescent reflections. Its small bald head and bare neck reveal dark gray, wrinkled skin. The beak is short and hooked.

In flight, its broad, rounded wings end in well-defined “fingers,” with silvery patches visible under the tips. The tail is short and square.

Males and females are identical.

Where does it live in Colombia?

This bird of Colombia is found everywhere across the Colombian territory, from the coasts to the Andean regions, up to 2,500 meters in altitude.

A bird of open spaces, it frequents the sides of roads where it feeds on animals killed accidentally, landfills, cities, and countryside—anywhere it can find something to eat.

Very social, it moves and feeds in groups, sometimes alongside other vulture species, and sleeps in large collective roosts.

What sets it apart

Its flight is reminiscent of a bat: energetic and jerky flapping, followed by short glides.

The baldness is a hygienic adaptation — without feathers, bacteria do not cling during meals. This true cleaner of nature secretes gastric juices among the most acidic in the animal kingdom that neutralize the most dangerous pathogens.

Not at all fearful, you will encounter it moving on the ground, in groups, searching for food.

Colombians call it gallinazo.

PARROTS AND PARAKEETS

In Colombia, more than 55 species of parrots and parakeets inhabit the cloud forests and Amazonian canopies — and some live nowhere else in the world.

The Yellow-eared Parrot – Ognorhynchus icterotis

Credit: Heiler Uribe @heilerunaturephotography

A conservation miracle.

What does it look like?

A large parrot of 42 cm, the golden-cheeked parakeet is immediately recognizable by its bright yellow cheeks, forehead, and belly, which contrast with an intense green plumage. Its black beak is powerful and hooked.

In flight, one can discern red highlights in the tail, often invisible at rest. Both sexes are identical.

Once distributed up to the northwest of Ecuador, it has only been observed in Colombian territory since the 1990s. The IUCN classifies it as vulnerable.

Where does it live in Colombia?

This bird of Colombia lives in the cloud forests of the Colombian Andes, between 1,800 and 3,000 meters in altitude.

It is now concentrated in the central cordillera, mainly in the departments of Tolima, Antioquia, and Caldas.

Its survival depends on a single tree: the wax palm. It feeds on it, nests in it, and follows its fruiting cycles, which rhythm its movements in nomadic groups.

It is in the Cocora Valley, near Salento, in the heart of the most well-known wax palm forest in Colombia, that it is now most easily observable.

What sets it apart

When researchers rediscovered it in 1999, there were only 81 individuals; the species was then considered extinct.

Its decline had an unexpected cause: every year, thousands of wax palms were cut down for the processions of Palm Sunday. In 2003, the Colombian Catholic Church banned this two-century-old practice — and the populations recovered. In 2019, there were 2,600 individuals.

It flies in small noisy groups, recognizable by their guttural calls that echo far into the forest.

A rare fact among parrots: a third adult sometimes helps the couple raise the chicks.

The Scarlet Macaw – Ara macao

Parrots Guacamayas Birds in Palmari Ecolodge Amazon

A chatterbox with rainbow colors.

What does it look like?

This large parrot of 84 cm is recognizable by its intense scarlet red plumage.

The red runs down the top of its wings, which gradually turn from bright yellow to deep blue, forming a striking gradient. The face is white and bare, the beak massive, ivory on top and black underneath.

Its long, pointed tail, red and blue, represents half of its size.

Males and females are identical — only the young are distinguished by their dark eyes — yellowish in adults.

Where does it live in Colombia?

The Ara macao frequents the lowland tropical rainforests, up to 500 meters in altitude.

It is present in the Amazon and in the gallery forests of the Llanos.

It lives almost exclusively in the canopy, where it finds most of its food: fruits, nuts, seeds, and buds. Its powerful beak allows it to crack the hardest shells.

This Colombian bird nests in natural cavities of large trees, at a height of 7 to 25 meters above the ground.

What sets it apart

The scarlet macaw lives in a monogamous pair for its entire life. Outside of breeding, it lives in groups that can reach up to twenty individuals, flying and feeding together.

In the evening, the group joins a common roost in the large trees.

You may have the chance to witness the unforgettable spectacle of dozens of macaws gathered on the clay banks to ingest essential minerals and neutralize the toxins from the seeds they consume.

With a lifespan that can exceed 50 years in the wild, the scarlet macaw is one of the most long-lived birds in the Amazon.

THE HUMMINGBIRDS

With 160 species, Colombia is the country of the hummingbird — a tiny hyperactive creature.

The Sword-billed Hummingbird – Ensifera ensifera

Credit: @cristian_valencia_birding

An oversized beak for such a small bird.

What does it look like?

The body of this amazing hummingbird measures only 13 to 14 cm — but its beak, slightly curved upwards, measures 10 to 12 cm by itself.

The plumage is metallic green, with bronze reflections on the head and back. The male has a dark throat with iridescent reflections and a slightly forked tail.

The female is identical, but her belly is white, speckled with green.

Where does it live in Colombia?

The Sword-billed Hummingbird is a bird of the heights.

In Colombia, it lives in the cloud forests of the three Andean mountain ranges, between 2,500 and 3,500 meters in altitude. Its habitat is directly dictated by its diet: it follows the distribution of flowers with long corollas — passionflowers, fuchsias — from which it is the only one to extract the nectar thanks to its long beak.

He also readily frequents the feeders installed in high-altitude gardens, which greatly facilitates his observation.

What sets it apart

Its beak is so long that it can’t use it to smooth its feathers: it grooms itself with its feet — a very rare behavior in a hummingbird.

When it is perched on a branch, this tiny bird from Colombia always points its beak towards the sky to maintain its balance.

Its relationship with the passionflower Passiflora mixta is a wonderful example of evolution. The bird and the flower have evolved together; the flower’s tube matches the exact length of its beak. Without the sword-billed hummingbird, this passionflower cannot reproduce.

TOUCANS

Nowhere else in the world will you find as many toucans as in Colombia: 21 species, from the Amazonian plains to the cloud forests of the Andes.

The Keel-billed Toucan – Ramphastos sulfuratus

Minca Colombia - Bird tucan - East Caribbean coast

Another beak story for the most extravagant bird of the tropical forest.

What does it look like?

The keel-billed toucan measures between 42 and 55 cm. Its black plumage contrasts with a bright yellow throat, a red under-tail, and blue legs.

But it’s its beak that is the most astonishing: a true explosion of colors — green, orange, red, blue — it can measure up to 15 cm, which is a third of its body.

Another amazing fact: made of keratin on a frame of thin bones, this beak is hollow and light as a feather, despite its massive appearance.

The eye is surrounded by bare turquoise skin. Males and females are identical.

Where does it live in Colombia?

A low-altitude bird of Colombia, the keel-billed toucan frequents the humid tropical forests up to 1,900 m in altitude.

In Colombia, it mainly occupies the Caribbean region and the Chocó of the Pacific.

It spends most of its life in the canopy, where it finds the fruits it feeds on.

To nest, it occupies tree cavities—natural or carved by woodpeckers—that the couple defends fiercely.

What sets it apart

In flight, beak pointed forward, black body and yellow throat: it resembles a flying banana.

Highly vascularized, its beak is also a thermal organ that regulates its body temperature in the humidity of the rainforest.

Large fruit-eater but opportunistic, it plays an essential role in seed dispersal, thus contributing to the regeneration of the forest.

Playful and sociable bird, it lives in groups of 6 to 12, engages in duels with its beak, and throws fruits at its peers.

When it sings, it emits a deep and repeated croak, reminiscent of frogs and audible from afar.

THE TANAGERS

Colombia is home to nearly 180 species of tanagers — some of the most colorful and easiest birds to observe in the country.

The Blue-gray Tanager –Thraupis episcopus

The bird of cities, villages, and gardens.

What does it look like?

A bird of 16 to 18 cm, the Blue-gray Tanager is entirely blue — but in subtle shades.

The head and belly are pale blue-gray, the back and wings are a darker blue, and the shoulders display a patch of a different shade depending on the subspecies — lavender, bright blue, or white.

Its beak is short and thick. Males and females are identical; the young are duller.

It’s nothing spectacular, but once you have identified it, you will see it everywhere.

Where does it live in Colombia?

It is found throughout the territory, up to 2,600 meters in altitude.

Not demanding, this bird from Colombia avoids dense forests but adapts to almost all semi-open environments: gardens, forest edges, plantations, roadsides, urban parks, where it easily finds fruits and nectar. It willingly feeds on cultivated fruits like papaya.

It generally lives in pairs or small groups.

What sets it apart

Its name comes from the Latin episcopusbishop — in reference to its bluish hues reminiscent of episcopal garments.

Monogamous, it nests high in trees, but settles without issue in the crevices of human constructions. Both parents raise the chicks together.

Its nest is sometimes parasitized by the shiny cowbird, a bird that lays its eggs in the nests of other species so that they raise its young in its place.

WETLAND BIRDS

From the Llanos to the Caribbean coasts, Colombian wetlands are the realm of large waders and aquatic birds.

The Scarlet Ibis – Eudocimus ruber

Credit: Maria Paula Lozano @mapalozano.wildlife

An elegant bird dressed all in red, from legs to beak.

What does it look like?

The scarlet ibis measures between 56 and 63 cm. Its plumage is entirely scarlet — except for the black tips of its primary wings, visible only in flight.

Its long, thin, downward-curved beak is used to probe the mud. Long legs and a long neck make it a well-proportioned wader.

Males and females are identical. The young are gray-brown at birth and only become bright red starting from their second year, thanks to the pigments from the crustaceans they consume.

Where does it live in Colombia?

The scarlet ibis is a bird of wetlands.

In Colombia, it is mainly found in the mangroves of the Caribbean coast and in the large plains of the Llanos in the east of the country, where the concentrations are the highest.

It only frequents mudflats, estuaries, lagoons, and shallow waters — anywhere its beak allows it to uncover crustaceans, insects, and mollusks.

Social, this bird of Colombia always moves in groups, sometimes in impressive flights gathering several thousand individuals.

What sets it apart

Like the flamingo, the Scarlet Ibis owes its color to what it eats: the crustaceans in its diet are rich in a carotenoid pigment that gradually tints its feathers.

It is the only wading bird in the world with red plumage.

In flight, flocks adopt a V-formation — a magical sight, especially against a mangrove landscape at sunset.

OTHER REMARKABLE BIRDS OF COLOMBIA

Colorful, extravagant, or unexpected — a small selection of other birds of Colombia you might encounter.

The Andean Motmot – Momotus aequatorialis

A curiosity of nature.

What does it look like?

The Andean Motmot measures between 46 and 48 cm. Its plumage is entirely green, with the wings and tail a bright blue.

It sports a crown of bright blue topped with a black cap in the center. A black mask borders its eyes.

Its most remarkable feature: an oversized tail with two central feathers ending in a racket shape — a plumage unmatched in the Andean forest.

Males and females are identical.

Where does it live in Colombia?

This large motmot lives in the humid high-altitude forests of the three Andean mountain ranges, between 1,500 and 3,100 meters in altitude. It favors dense undergrowth, often near streams.

Alone or in pairs, it can remain perched without moving, blending into the vegetation despite its bright colors — which sometimes makes it difficult to spot.

Omnivore, this bird from Colombia feeds on insects, small lizards, and fruits, and nests in very deep burrows that it digs along the banks of streams.

What sets it apart

Its tail has always intrigued: it was long believed that the bird pulled out its feathers. In reality, the fragile barbs fall naturally during preening, leaving a partially bare shaft with an end that forms the racket.

It uses its tail by swinging it from right to left to signal to predators that it has spotted them. A pendulum movement that, in Colombia, earns it the nickname of relojero — the clock bird.

It is at dawn that its song is heard: a deep and repeated “mot-mot,” reminiscent of an owl — which simply gave it its name.

In Colombia, it is commonly called barranquero andino.

The Golden-headed Quetzal – Pharomachrus auriceps

Credit: diego_torres89 @diego_torres89

The discreet jewel of the cloud forests.

What does it look like?

The golden quetzal measures 33 to 36 cm, including the tail.

The male is magnificent: iridescent emerald green on top, with a bright red belly and chest. Its head has a golden-bronze sheen that earned it its name; its beak is yellow.

The female is more dull: golden-brown head, brownish-green chest, belly of a less bright red.

The tail of both sexes is entirely black.

Where does it live in Colombia?

The golden quetzal lives in the cloud forests of the Colombian Andes, between 1,200 and 3,100 meters in altitude.

This bird of Colombia is found on the three cordilleras and in the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta.

An arboreal species, it spends most of its life in the undergrowth and the canopy, rarely on the ground. Mainly frugivorous, it swallows whole fruits, dispersing their seeds and thus playing a key role in forest regeneration.

It nests in the cavities of dead trees that it digs as a couple.

What sets it apart

Solitary outside the breeding season, the golden quetzal forms a monogamous pair from February to June. Both parents share the incubation and rearing of the chicks.

Its song is a melancholic and repetitive whistle that English ornithologists have described as “go-home, go-home.”

It is easier to hear than to observe: it can remain motionless for long minutes, its emerald green blending with the vegetation.

The Green Jay – Cyanocorax yncas

Credit: @vida.andina

Clever, noisy, and colorful.

What does it look like?

The green jay measures 29 to 30 cm and sports a vibrant plumage. The back and wings are a deep green; the belly is bright yellow; the throat and facial mask are an intense black.

It features a white cap topped with a bright blue crest, and its eyes, with an iris of striking yellow contrasting with the black and blue, give it an astonishing look.

Both sexes are identical.

Where does it live in Colombia?

This Colombian bird lives in the Andean forests between 900 and 2,600 meters in altitude, across the three cordilleras.

It favors wooded edges, dense secondary forests with continuous canopy cover, and avoids open areas.

Gregarious by nature, it forms tight family groups that move together through the shrub layer and canopy, in search of insects, fruits, and eggs.

Noisy, it is easily noticeable by his repetitive calls that earn it the popular name Carriquí in Colombia.

What sets it apart

The green jay is a bird that arouses interest among ethologists.

Indeed, it is one of the rare birds to use tools: it has been observed grabbing twigs to dislodge insects under the bark of trees. It can also catch them in mid-flight.

It also practices cooperative breeding: the young from the previous season stay in the group to help feed the chicks born that year.

The Russet-backed Oropendola – Psarocolius angustifrons

Credit: Alexander Sepulveda @alexandersepulveda_ph

A rather noisy master architect.

What does it look like?

Large and stocky, this Colombian bird sports an olive-brown plumage, with a warmer russet back and rump. In flight, it reveals intensely yellow side feathers.

Its long, pointed beak varies according to altitude — yellowish in Andean subspecies, black in Amazonian populations.

Males and females wear the same livery, but the male is larger: 44 to 48 cm for the male, 34 to 38 cm for the female.

Where does it live in Colombia?

In Colombia, the rufous cacique is found on the slopes of the three Andean cordilleras and in the eastern Amazonian plains.

It frequents humid and very humid forests, wooded edges, and areas of secondary vegetation between 400 and 2,500 meters in altitude.

A gregarious bird, it moves in groups in the canopy, searching for fruits, insects, and nectar, sometimes in the company of other species.

What sets it apart

This Colombian bird owes its popular name, mochilero, to its nests made of plant fibers shaped like mochilas, those traditional Andean bags.

It hangs them in colonies at the end of isolated tree branches to keep them out of reach of predators.

Only the females build the nest, which can measure more than a meter, and incubate; the males, on the other hand, sing and compete for the colony’s hierarchy.

Oropéndola is its other nickname: oro for the yellow tail feathers, péndola for these pendulous nests that swing over the void.

The Andean Cock-of-the-rock – Rupicola peruvianus

Cock of the rock - Jardin Antioquia Colombia (3)

A spectacular bird from Colombia and a master of seduction.

What does it look like?

With its scarlet plumage, the male is one of the most recognizable birds of the Andes.

Head, chest, and body are a vivid red-orange; the wings and tail are black and it has a large silver patch on its back.

Its disk-shaped, rounded, and prominent crest, which almost entirely hides its beak, gives it a rather curious profile.

The sturdy legs and eyes are a bright orange.

The female is much more discreet: dark reddish-brown over the entire body, reduced crest, pale and fixed eye. Male and female measure about 32 cm.

Where does it live in Colombia?

The Andean cock-of-the-rock lives in the cloud forests of the Andes, between 500 and 2,400 meters in altitude. It is easily observable in Jardín.

It is found on the humid slopes of the three mountain ranges, often near water courses, waterfalls, and rocky outcrops where it nests.

It loves dense, shaded forests, where it mainly feeds on fruits.

Outside the breeding season, it is a rather solitary and discreet bird, even shy, and becomes difficult to observe despite its bright plumage.

What sets it apart

The cock-of-the-rock is a master of the collective display.

The males gather on “leks” — natural display grounds, clearings, or open areas — and compete silently with plenty of jumps, bowing, inflated crests, and spread wings.

The female watches, chooses, then disappears. She will build her mud nest alone, attaching it to a damp rocky wall, often near a waterfall.

The Hoatzin – Opisthocomus hoazin

Credit: Enever Loaiza Aristizabal @unrinconbiodiverso

A bird from Colombia, seemingly straight out of prehistory.

What does it look like?

At 62 to 70 cm, the hoatzin has the silhouette of a large chicken lost in the jungle.

Its crest of reddish-orange feathers, standing on a head that seems too small for its stocky body, contrasts with its bare face of intense electric blue and bright red eyes.

The plumage on the back is dark brown, iridescent with bronze and olive, with white streaks on the nape. The belly is light beige, and the sides are reddish. The tail, long and square, ends with a white-beige band.

Males and females are almost identical.

Where does it live in Colombia?

The hoatzin is a bird of the tropical wetlands of the Llanos and the Amazon. It frequents the wooded banks of rivers, marshes, gallery forests, and mangroves. It never strays far from water.

Sedentary and clumsy in its movements, this funny bird of Colombia lives in small family groups and spends its days perched in the dense vegetation that overlooks the banks, making it rather easy to observe.

What sets it apart

The hoatzin flies very poorly due to its enormous crop, adapted for digesting leaves, which leaves little room for the pectoral muscles.

In fact, it is the only bird in the world to digest like a cow, through fermentation, which gives it its Colombian nickname of pava hedionda, the stinky turkey, because of the manure smell it emits.

On the other hand, its chicks are born with claws on their wings to climb and swim — which has long fascinated paleontologists regarding a link with the Archaeopteryx, the fossil ancestor of birds. These claws disappear in adulthood.

At sunset, its hoarse and guttural cries resonate in the marshes.

The Colombian Chachalaca – Ortalis columbiana

Credit: Enever Loaiza Aristizabal @unrinconbiodiverso

A most thunderous bird of Colombia.

What does it look like?

The Colombian Chachalaca has the silhouette of an arboreal galliform: sturdy body, long neck, small head, and long tail. It measures 50 to 60 cm.

Its plumage is simple — brown on the back, gray on the head, and a gray chest with well-marked white scales. The belly is beige, the flanks and the underside of the tail are reddish.

Under the throat, it has a small blood-red wattle, folded at rest, which unfolds when it sings at the top of the canopy. Males and females are identical.

Where does it live in Colombia?

Strictly endemic, the Colombian chachalaca lives only in the Colombian inter-Andean valleys: the Cauca Valley and the Magdalena Valley, between 300 and 2,200 meters in altitude.

It frequents humid forests, premontane forests, wooded edges, and areas of secondary vegetation.

Gregarious, it moves in small groups at different levels of vegetation, from the shrub layer to the canopy. It is also found in shaded coffee plantations and increasingly in peri-urban areas, such as in Barichara, in Santander, where it is impossible to miss.

What sets it apart

Its Colombian name, guacharaca, is a direct onomatopoeia of its call — a dry, hoarse, and repetitive call that several individuals emit in chorus, especially at sunrise. The groups respond to each other from one grove to another over long distances.

Threatened by the deforestation of the inter-Andean valleys, it shows an adaptability that now drives it to settle in parks and wooded gardens.

It plays a key role in the regeneration of inter-Andean forests — studies have shown that the seeds it ingests germinate significantly better after having passed through its digestive tract.