Barred Warbler
A species of Typical Old World Warblers Scientific name : Curruca nisoria Genus : Typical Old World Warblers
Barred Warbler, A species of Typical Old World Warblers
Botanical name: Curruca nisoria
Genus: Typical Old World Warblers
Content
Description General Info
Photo By Hugh Venables , used under CC-BY-SA-2.0 /Cropped and compressed from original
Description
The barred warbler (Curruca nisoria) is a typical warbler which breeds across temperate regions of central and eastern Europe and western and central Asia. This passerine bird is strongly migratory, and winters in tropical eastern Africa. It is the largest Curruca warbler, 15.5–17 cm in length and weighing 22–36 g, mainly grey above and whitish below. Adult males are dark grey above with white tips on the wing coverts and tail feathers, and heavily barred below. The female is similar but slightly paler and has only light barring. Young birds buffy grey-brown above, pale buff below, and have very little barring, with few obvious distinctive features; they can easily be confused with garden warblers, differing in the slight barring on the tail coverts and the pale fringes on the wing feathers, and their slightly larger size. The eye has a yellow iris in adults, dark in immatures; the bill is blackish with a paler base, and the legs stout, grey-brown.
Size
15 cm
Life Expectancy
10 years
Dite type
Insectivorous
General Info
Sounds
Call
Recording location: China
Species Status
Not globally threatened.
Photo By Hugh Venables , used under CC-BY-SA-2.0 /Cropped and compressed from original