Style1½ inches thick (3.75 cm) Product Details Artist grade canvas, archival inks, wooden stretcher bars, and UVB protective coating
AvailablityUsually ships within five business days. Artisteinsiedler CollectionAnimals
Description Popular name: Macaw-canind Name in English: Blue-and-yellow-macaw Scientific name: Altar ararauna Geographical distribution: Brazil Central America. Habitat: Meadows and forest edge. Alimentary habits: Fruits, mainly and seeds. Reproduction: Incubation period of approximately 28 days. Life period: In captivity approximately 60 years. Brazil is the country with the largest number of representatives of the family Psittacidae, being denominated from the time of the discovery as Earth of the Parrots. The macaws are the largest representatives of this family. They possess a beak strong, high and curved adapted to cut hard seeds. These birds don't contribute to the dispersion of plants, because they triturate the pits of the coconuts, destroying the seeds. One of the knownest representatives is the macaw Canind. It possesses the black beak and a plumage characterized mainly by the blue of their wings and for the yellow of his womb. Could measure up to 80 cm of length. It can be found from Central America to the southeast of Brazil, Bolivia and Paraguay. They inhabit forest edges and meadows of palm trees. It is usually observed flying to the pairs or even in a group with three individuals, being able to this last being a nestling. They sleep in groups with up to 30 individuals and they make great daily displacements from the feeding area to the rest area. When the reproductive time arrives form couples that followers stay for a lifetime. It only gives creates every two years and the posture of eggs understands the months of August and January, putting 2 eggs on average with incubation period of approximately 30 days. The nestlings stay in the nest until the thirteenth week, period in which they are fed by the parents that regurgitate the food in their beaks. Make nest in holes of hollow trunks, preferring the very deep nests to protect the eggs and nestlings of the