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The Toco Toucan (Ramphastos toco). The Toco toucan is the largest of all the
toucans, weighing in at 700 grams. It has a beak nearly ten inches long, which
it deftly uses to pick small fruits and berries from bushes and trees. The Toco
is not only the largest toucan, but it is the most widespread in the wild,
having a range that incorporates most of Brazil, and parts of northern Argentina, eastern Peru, and southern Guyana and Surinam.
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The Toco toucan has been bred in captivity for a number of years, and is
considered a magnificent display bird in zoos, and is widely enjoyed as an
excellent pet.
Aviculture: Outdoor flights should be at
least 8' x
12' x 6' for the larger toucans. Toucans may be a bit pugnacious with
other species in their family and with smaller birds, and therefore should not
be housed with different birds in small enclosures or cages.
Toucans are frugivorous birds, whose primary diet is
fruit. In the wild they consume fruits from as many as 100 species of plants and
trees. They also consume a variety of insects for protein, especially during
their nesting cycle. |
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They MUST be fed FRESH fruit every day! The fruit diet should also be supplemented
with a low iron protein source (such as Mazuri Low Iron Softbill diet by Purina Mills).
Toucans are not as difficult to breed as often thought and must be housed alone in pairs, preferably following the size enclosures mentioned above under
housing. While they will breed in boxes, with a concave bottom, they are far
more likely to breed if they are provided with a "natural" nest, constructed from a palm tree log. Logs allow these birds to continually dig their nest
chamber deeper, which helps them cement the pair bond.
All Ramphastids lay pure white, elliptical shaped eggs, usually 3-4 per clutch.
Incubation for all species lasts 16 days, and young fledge the nest at 46-50
days for larger toucans.
First captive breeding: May 14, 1977; Riverbanks Zoo.
CITES status: Appendix II
Emerald
Forest Bird Gardens
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