About Rhyticeros cassidix (Temminck, 1823)
Rhyticeros cassidix, commonly called the knobbed hornbill, is a large black hornbill species. It has a yellow bill, white tail feathers, pale blue skin surrounding the eye, blackish feet, and a bare dark blue throat. Males differ in appearance from females: males have a rufous to buff face and neck, orange-red eyes, and a tall red casque on the top of the bill, while females have a black face and neck, a yellow casque, and brownish eyes. This species is an Indonesian endemic, found only on Sulawesi, Buton, Lembeh, Togian, and Muna Island. It lives in evergreen forest at elevations up to 1,800 m, and also forages in secondary forest, open woodland, and plantations. Like other hornbill species, the knobbed hornbill is thought to be monogamous. Its diet is made up mostly of fruits, but it also eats insects and small vertebrates. Its breeding season lasts 27 to 30 weeks, and it appears to be triggered by a sharp reduction in rainfall. For egg-laying, the female seals herself inside a tree hole using her own feces. During this period, the male brings food to the female and their young through a narrow slit left in the seal. Knobbed hornbills act as important seed dispersers in their native habitat, and affect the initial fate of seeds from multiple tropical forest tree species.