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MACAW

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Originally appearing in Volume V17, Page 197 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MACAW  , or, as formerly spelt, MACCAW, the name given to some fifteen or more

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species of large, long-tailed birds of the parrot-
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family, natives of the neotropical region, and forming a very well-known and easily recognized genus Ara, and to the four species of Brazilian Hyacinthine macaws of the genera Anodorhynchus and Cyanopsittacus . Most of the macaws are remarkable for their
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gaudy plumage, which exhibits the brightest
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scarlet, yellow, blue and green in varying proportion and often in violent contrast, while a white visage often adds a very
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peculiar and expressive character.' With one exception the known species of Ara inhabit the mainland of
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America from
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Paraguay to Mexico, being especially abundant in
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Bolivia, where no fewer than seven of them (or nearly one
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half) have been found (Proc . Zool .
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Soc., 1879, p . 634) . The single extra-
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continental species, A. tricolor, is one of the most brilliantly coloured, and is peculiar to Cuba, where, according to Gundlach (Ornitologia Cabana, p . 126), its numbers are rapidly decreasing so that there is every chance of its becoming
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extinct ? Of the best known species of the
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group, the blue-and-yellow macaw, A. ararauna, has an extensive range in South America from Guiana in the east to
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Colombia in the west, and southwards to Paraguay . Of large
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size, it is to be seen in almost every zoological garden, and it is very frequently kept alive in private houses, for its temper is
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pretty good, and it will become strongly attached to those who tend it . Its richly coloured plumage, sufficiently indicated by its
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common
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English name, supplies feathers eagerly sought by salmon-fishers for the making of artificial flies . The red-and-blue macaw, A. macao, is even larger and more gorgeously clothed, for, besides the colours expressed in its ordinary appellation, yellow and green enter into its adornment . It inhabits Central as well as South America as far as,Bolivia, and is also a common
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bird in captivity, though perhaps less often seen than the foregoing .

The red-andyellow species, A. chloroptera, ranging from

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Panama to Brazil, is smaller, or at least has a shorter tail, and is not quite so usually met with in menageries . The red-and-green, A. militaris, smaller again than the last, is not unfrequent in confinement, and presents the colours of the name it bears . This has the most northerly extension of habitat, occurring in Mexico and thence southwards to Bolivia . In A. manilata and A. nobilis the prevailing colour is green and blue . The Hyacinthine macaws A. hyacinthinus, A. leari, A. glaucus and Cyanopsittacus spixi are almost entirely blue . The macaws live well in captivity, either chained to a perch or kept in large aviaries in which their strong
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flight is noticeable . The note of these birds is harsh and screaming . The sexes are This serves to
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separate the macaws from the long-tailed parakeets of the New
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World (Conurus), to which they are very nearly allied . a There is some reason to think that
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Jamaica may have formerly possessed a macaw (though no example is known to exist), and if so It was most likely a peculiar species . Sloane (Voyage, ii . 297), after describing what he calls the "
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great maccaw " (A. ararauna), which he had seen in captivity in that island, mentions the " small maccaw " as being very common in the woods there, and P . H .

Gosse (Birds of Jamaica, p . 260) gives, on the authority of
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Robin-son, a
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local naturali.it of the last century, the description of a bird which cannot be reconciled with any species now known, though it must have evidently been allied to the Cuban A. tricolor . Macaulay's whole
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works were collected in 1866 by his
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sister, Lady Trevelyan, in 8 vols . The first four volumes are occupied by the
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History; the next three contain the Essays, and the Lives which he contributed to the
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Encyclopaedia Britannica . In vol. viii. are collected his Speeches, the
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Lays of Ancient Rome, and some
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miscellaneous pieces . The "
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life " by Dean Milman, printed in vol. viii. of the edition of 1858-1862, is prefixed to the "
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People's Edition " (4 vols., 1863-1864) . Messrs .
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Longmans, Green & Co. published a alike; the lustreless white eggs are laid in hollow trees, usually two at a time . The birds are gregarious but apparently monogamous . (A .

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