Black-headed weaver
The black-headed weaver, also known as yellow-backed weaver, is a species of bird in the family Ploceidae. It is a resident breeder in damp areas in tropical Africa.
Taxonomy
The black-headed weaver was formally described in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae under the binomial name Loxia melanocephala. He specified the type locality as Guinea. Linnaeus based his account on the "Gamboa Groasbeak" that had been described and illustrated in 1750 by the English naturalist Eleazar Albin in his book A Natural History of Birds. Albin had sketched a live specimen belonging to the Duke of Chandos at his country house, Cannons, which was located about northwest of London near Edgware. The specific epithet melanocephalus, melanocephala combines the Ancient Greek μελας/melas, μελανος/melanos meaning "black" with -κεφαλος/-kephalos meaning "-headed". The black-headed weaver is now one of 67 species placed in the genus Ploceus that was introduced in 1816 by the French naturalist Georges Cuvier.Five subspecies are recognised:P. m. melanocephalus – Mauritania, Senegal, Gambia, Mali and NigerP. m. capitalis – Guinea Bissau to Nigeria, north Cameroon, southwest Chad and north Central African RepublicP. m. duboisi Hartlaub, 1886 – east Congo, south Central African Republic and southwest Sudan to north ZambiaP. m. dimidiatus – northeast Sudan and west EritreaP. m. fischeri Reichenow, 1887 – east DR Congo, Uganda, west Kenya, northwest Tanzania and north Zambia
P. victoriae Ash, 1986 is now thought to be a hybrid between P. melanocephalus and P. castanops.
Description
Breeding males have a black head and yellow nuchal collar, which is absent in the Juba and golden-backed weavers. It also differs from the latter species and village weaver by its plain, greenish mantle plumage. The pale yellow underpart plumage is suffused with a variable amount of chestnut.The female and non-breeding male lack the black head, and resemble a female masked weaver, except that they have dark eyes and a darker bill. Their buffy breast plumage also distinguishes them from non-breeding golden-backed weavers.