Green-backed Camaroptera
A species of Camaropteras, Also known as Gray-backed Camaroptera Scientific name : Camaroptera brachyura Genus : Camaropteras
Green-backed Camaroptera, A species of Camaropteras
Also known as:
Gray-backed Camaroptera
Botanical name: Camaroptera brachyura
Genus: Camaropteras
Content
Description General Info
Description
The green-backed camaroptera (Camaroptera brachyura), also known as the bleating camaroptera, is a small bird in the family Cisticolidae. This bird is a resident breeder in Africa south of the Sahara Desert. Recent studies suggest this species and the grey-backed camaroptera may be the same species. This skulking passerine is typically found low in dense cover. The green-backed camaroptera binds large leaves together low in a bush and builds a grass nest within the leaves. The normal clutch is two or three eggs. These 11.5 cm long warblers have green upperparts. The wings are olive and the underparts whitish grey. The sexes are similar, but juveniles are paler yellow on the breast. Like most members in the group, green-backed camaroptera is insectivorous. The green-backed camaroptera was described by the French ornithologist Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot in 1821 under the binomial name Sylvia brachyura. The type locality is the Cape of Good Hope. The specific epithet brachyura is from the Ancient Greek brakhus for "short" and -ouros for "-tailed". There are five subspecies: C. b. pileata Reichenow, 1891 – southeast Kenya to southeast Tanzania C. b. fugglescouchmani Moreau, 1939 – northeast Zambia, north Malawi and east Tanzania C. b. bororensis Gunning & Roberts, 1911 – south Tanzania, south Malawi and north Mozambique C. b. constans Clancey, 1952 – southeast Zimbabwe, south Mozambique and northeast South Africa C. b. brachyura (Vieillot, 1821) – south and east South Africa
Size
11 cm
Feeding Habits
Green-backed Camaroptera's diet primarily consists of small insects like caterpillars, beetles, and ants, with occasional fruits. Preferring to forage alone or in small groups close to the ground by gleaning from foliage or hopping in leaf litter, green-backed Camaroptera also uniquely tail-cocks like wrens and may follow disturbances to catch prey.
Habitat
The green-backed Camaroptera typically inhabits forest understorey, often found in clearings or at forest edges, with a propensity for gallery forests, desert oases, and thickets along watercourses. These birds are also present in savanna woodlands, especially around bush clumps on termitaria, and are known to frequent well-wooded garden spaces and occasionally mangrove areas. They are adaptable to a range of vegetation, including areas with introduced and invasive plant species like Lantana and Chromolaena. Green-backed Camaroptera exhibit habitat partitioning where they overlap with closely related species, preferring forests and forest edges over drier savanna woodlands.
Dite type
Insectivorous
General Info
Species Status
Not globally threatened.
Scientific Classification
Phylum
Chordates Class
Birds Order
Perching birds Family
Cisticolas and allies Genus
Camaropteras Species
Green-backed Camaroptera