Interactions between individuals are not rare. Research found that other than producing calls, tail movement is also a method of communication among individuals. Tail rising could be a sign of dominance or aggression to communicate status, or associated with mating. Tail raising is also used as an alarm or deterrent to let a predator know that it has been spotted.
Food and feeding The elegant trogon is a
frugivore and
insectivore, meaning they consume fruits and insects. Their broad bills and weak legs reflect their diet and arboreal habits. Their diet consists of grapes, cherries, figs, chokecherry, and buckthorn as well as grasshoppers, mantids, caterpillars, moths and beetles. Very occasionally it will also prey upon small vertebrates, usually lizards. Although their flight is fast, they are reluctant to fly any distance. They typically perch upright and motionless. To hunt their prey, they remain motionless on a perch, then jump into flight. To grab fruits, they will hover over the berries to pluck them
Breeding It nests high in an unlined shallow cavity, usually selecting an old
flicker hole, with a typical clutch of two to three eggs. Incubation periods last an average of 17 days with both parents taking turns to incubate. Elegant trogons display biparental care, where both the males and females are responsible of taking care of their offspring. Both parents take responsibility for delivering food to their young. Usually, they would offer insects, rather than fruits. Both parents feed their offspring until a month after they fledge. Once that happens, the adults will split their broods, with males taking the males and females taking the females. ==Conservation==