AFRICAN PYGMY-FALCON


The 'African Pygmy-falcon' (''Polihierax semitorquatus'') is a falcon that lives in eastern and southern Africa. As a small falcon, only 19 to 20 cm long, it preys on insects, small reptiles and even small mammals.

Contents
Description
Range, habitat, and population
Nesting
Polyandry
References
External links

Description


Adult African Pygmy-falcons are white below and on the face, grey above, the female having a chestnut back.
There are white "eye spots" on the nape. Juveniles have a brown back, duller than adult females, and a rufous wash on the breast. The flight feathers of the wings are spotted black and white (more black above, more white below); the tail is barred black and white. Birds of Kenya and Northern Tanzania, Zimmerman, Dale A.; Turner, Donald A.; and Pearson, David J., , , Princeton University Press, 1999, ISBN 0-691-01022-6 Birds of Southern Africa, Sinclair, Ian; Hockey, Phil; and Tarboton, Warwick, , , Princeton University Press, 2002, ISBN 0-691-09862-1
The flight is low and undulating. In size, pattern, and the habit of perching upright on an exposed branch or treetop, this species resembles some shrikes.
The call is "a high-pitched ''kikiKIK'', repeated" (Kenya) or "a 'chip-chip' and a 'kik-kik-kik-kik'" (southern Africa).

Range, habitat, and population


The African Pygmy-falcon inhabits dry bush. The subspecies ''P. s. castanonotus'' occurs from Sudan to Somalia and south to Uganda and Tanzania; ''P. s. semitorquatus'' occurs from Angola to northern South Africa. Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern. This range is estimated to have an area of 2.7 million km2, and the total population is estimated to be between 100,000 and 1 million birds.

Nesting


In Kenya, African Pygmy-falcon nest in White-headed Buffalo-weaver nests, and the ranges of the two birds coincide. In southern Africa, they are found around Red-billed Buffalo-weaver nests but predominantly nest in the vacant rooms of Sociable Weaver nests, which are large and multichambered—even if the Sociable Weavers still have an active colony in the nest. Despite being bird-eaters and bigger than Sociable Weavers, the Pygmy-falcons largely leave the latter alone, though they do occasionally catch and eat nestlings and even adults. Pygmy Falcon predation of nestlings of their obligate host, the Sociable Weaver, Covas, Rita; Huyser, Onno; and Doutrelant, Claire, , , Ostrich, 2004

Polyandry


African Pygmy-falcons occasionally engage in polyandrous relationships, where there are more than two adults living together and tending nestlings. There are four potential reasons for this behavior: defense, co-operative polyandry, delayed dispersal of offspring, and thermoregulation (warmth). Corroboration for the last is that in winter African Pygmy-falcons nest further inside the nest of Sociable Weavers, where there is better insulation. Co-operative breeding in the Pygmy Falcon ''Polihierax semitorquatus'', Spottiswoode, Claire; Herrmann, Eric; Rasa, O. Anne E.; and Sapsford, Colin W., , , Ostrich, 2004

References



External links



Birds Of Prey

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