
- ORDER: Passeriformes
- FAMILY: Fringillidae
Basic Description
The Iiwi is one of the crown jewels of Hawaiian birdlife, a brilliant vermilion-and-black songbird with a long, deeply curved bill. This Hawaiian honeycreeper moves noisily about the canopy of mountain forests on the islands of Hawaii, Maui, and Kauai. As it searches for nectar from ohia, mamane, and other native flowers it keeps up a running chatter of shrill notes. This species is now confined largely to areas above the range of mosquitos that carry avian malaria—a disease that has severely threatened many Hawaiian songbirds—but it is vulnerable to climate change that could allow mosquitos and malaria to expand upslope into Iiwi’s current core range.
More ID InfoOther Names
- Iiwi (Spanish)
- Iiwi rouge (French)