Club-winged Manakin vs gray wolf
Machaeropterus deliciosus compared with Canis lupus
Key Differences
- Club-winged Manakin is Least Concern while gray wolf is Critically Endangered.
Taxonomic Classification
| Rank | Club-winged Manakin | gray wolf |
|---|---|---|
| Kingdom same | Animalia (hewan) | Animalia (hewan) |
| Phylum same | Chordata (Chordates) | Chordata (Chordates) |
| Class | Aves (burung) | Mammalia (mamalia) |
| Order | Passeriformes (burung pengicau) | Carnivora (Carnivorans) |
| Family | Pipridae | Canidae (Dogs & Wolves) |
| Genus | Machaeropterus | Canis (Dogs & Wolves) |
| Species | Machaeropterus deliciosus | Canis lupus |
Evolutionary Relationship
Club-winged Manakin and gray wolf share a common ancestor at the Phylum level: Chordata. (Chordates)
Conservation Status
Club-winged Manakin
LC — Least Concerngray wolf
CR — Critically EndangeredPopulation: ~300.0K
Trend: Stable →
Physical Characteristics
| Attribute | Club-winged Manakin | gray wolf |
|---|---|---|
| Diet | — | Carnivore |
| Average Lifespan | — | 13 years |
| Average Length | — | 1.6 m |
| Average Weight | — | 45.0 kg |
Habitat & Geographic Range
Club-winged Manakin
Typically found in various aerial, terrestrial, and aquatic environments.
Distributed across Colombia, Ecuador, and Norway.
gray wolf
Found across multiple habitat types including tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests, deserts and xeric shrublands, and tropical and subtropical dry broadleaf forests, among 13 distinct biome types. Populations are also found in montane and highland environments at higher elevations.
Widely distributed across Africa (Seychelles), Asia (Japan), Europe (5 countries), North America (7 countries), Oceania and the Pacific (Marshall Islands, Vanuatu), and South America (5 countries). Currently classified as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List, this species faces significant conservation challenges across its range.
Club-winged Manakin
The club-winged manakin (Machaeropterus deliciosus) is a small passerine bird in the family Pipridae native to the foothill and lower montane forests of western Colombia and northwestern Ecuador. Males are remarkable for their unique sound-producing mechanism: they possess highly modified secondary flight feathers with thickened, clubbed shafts that they vibrate together at extremely high frequencies (over 100 Hz) to produce a distinctive mechanical song during courtship displays at leks. This makes M. deliciosus one of very few known birds to produce song through wing feather vibration (stridulation) rather than the syrinx. The dense, interlocking barbules of the modified feathers function as a resonating system analogous to a violin string on a bow. Males display at traditional lek sites on low perches in dense forest understory, where females visit to select mates. The species is listed as Least Concern by the IUCN and has a stable population across its limited but continuous range in the humid foothills of northwestern South America. It depends on intact lowland to foothill tropical forest.
gray wolf
The most widely distributed wild canid, gray wolves range from North America across Eurasia in diverse habitats including tundra, forests, and grasslands. Highly social animals living in family packs led by a dominant breeding pair. As keystone predators, wolves regulate prey populations and profoundly shape ecosystem structure, as demonstrated by their reintroduction in Yellowstone. Once heavily persecuted, populations are recovering in many regions.
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