Gallinago nigripennis
SUBFAMILY
Gallinagininae
TAXONOMY
Gallinago nigripennis Bonaparte, 1839, Cape of Good Hope.
Three subspecies.
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Ethiopian snipe; French: Bйcassine Africaine; German:
Afrikanische bekassine; Spanish: Agachadiza Africana.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
9.8–11.4 in (25–29 cm); 0.2–0.36 lb (90–164 g). Darker upperparts
contrast with white belly. Female similar to male but bill
slightly longer.
DISTRIBUTION
G. n. aequatorialis: Ethiopia, Eritrea, Uganda, Kenya and east
DRC, south to east Zimbabwe and north Mozambique; G. n.
angolensis: Angola, Namibia, Botswana, Zambia and west Zimbabwe;
G. n. aequatorialis: south Mozambique and South Africa.
HABITAT
Wetlands with short emergent vegetation, tussocks, and exposed
soft mud.
BEHAVIOR
Flushes with zigzag flight and harsh call. Male has display
flight with “drumming” produced by vibrating outer tail feathers.
In East Africa, nests at high altitudes and moves lower after
breeding.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Mainly crepuscular or nocturnal forager, probing for worms
and insect larvae.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
Monogamous. Breeds mainly during or after rains. Nests in a
pad of grass hidden in tussock on moist to flooded ground.
Clutch consists of two to three eggs.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Locally common to abundant. Vulnerable to habitat loss
through wetland destruction.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
None known.
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