Food and feeding The diet consists mainly of fruit and insects, although
lizards and
frogs have been recorded. The fruits consumed are often from the plant families
Lauraceae,
Annonaceae, and
Rubiaceae, although a few other plant families have also been reported in their diet. They are one of many species recorded
following army ants. They occasionally will eat high-protein fruits, but they prefer to eat the other fruits on their menu.
Breeding Male cocks-of-the-rock are
polygamous, and have nothing to do with nesting once mating is done. The male's energy instead is devoted to very elaborate display rituals that show off his magnificent plumage. These displays take place in communal
leks, where males gather to challenge rivals and beckon the females. The males are easily disturbed, so their behavior is not easy to see. One study reported that the display activity is dependent on light intensity, with the morning display period occurring during the same light intensity level as the afternoon period. At the lek, males have been observed to break up into pairs, performing "confrontation displays". This consists of facing each other while bowing, jumping, and flapping their wings, sometimes even snapping their bills, and at the same time giving off various squawking and grunting calls. When the female approaches, she becomes even more intense. The display turns into a cacophony of bright color and a frenzied activity filling the air with very strange sounds. Breeding takes place at different times of the year in different areas. In Colombia, breeding normally happens from February until July. In Ecuador, the breeding interval spans from July until February.
Nesting The nests, built entirely by the female, are mud-plastered to cave entrances or rocky outcrops in forest ravines. The nests are often constructed from the saliva of the females mixed in with vegetable matter and mud. The nest is shaped like a concave cup. The female typically lays two white eggs. The female incubates these eggs for about 25 to 28 days.
Impact on environment Andean cocks-of-the-rock influence the environment around them. It was found that a
white-capped dipper renovated an abandoned cock-of-the-rock nest to lay its eggs in. Cocks-of-the-rock also change the surrounding flora through seed dispersal. Seeds that the birds ingest often are found deposited around lek and nesting sites. This favors the germination and growth of those seeds. The diversity of these types of seeds has been found to be increased at lek and nests and decreased throughout the surrounding forest.
Predators Andean cocks-of-the-rock face slightly larger predators than smaller songbirds. Predators are attracted to leks by the conspicuous behavior of the displaying males. The animals reported to prey on adult cocks-of-the-rock include
hawk-eagles,
forest-falcons,
hawks,
owls,
jaguars,
mountain lions,
ocelots, and the
boa constrictor. ==Relationship with humans==