Poecilodryas cerviniventris / Buff-sided robin (Poecilodryas cerviniventris)

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Wikipedia: Buff-sided robin Quelle: WIKIPEDIA 1200px-Buff-sided_robin_near_Borroloola_NT_2010.jpg

Beobachtungen

🔍 Keine dokumentierte Beobachtung

Beschreibung

Systematik: Gattung Poecilodryas (Poecilodryas); Familie Petroicidae (Petroicidae)
Allgemein: The buff-sided robin (Poecilodryas cerviniventris) is a small, diurnal, insectivorous, perching (passerine) bird in the family Petroicidae, a group commonly known as the Australo-Papuan or Australasian robins. It is also known as the buff-sided fly-robin, buff-sided shrike-robin[3] and Isabellflankenschnäpper (German).[4] The buff-sided robin is endemic to northern Australia, where it primarily occurs in riparian forests and monsoon vine thickets from the Kimberly region of Western Australia to the north-west Queensland Gulf of Carpentaria. The plumage of the adult birds is characterised by a dark hood and back with a prominent white stripe on the supercilium; a white throat, white wing and tail bars, and a striking buff to orange patch on the flank below the wings. Adult birds are not sexually dimorphic; however, males are generally larger and can be separated from females based on morphological measurements. Buff-sided robins predominantly take insects from the ground by sallying from an observational perch. Insect prey are also occasionally taken by hawking on the wing or by gleaning from the trunk or foliage of riparian vegetation. [mehr]