Cercotrichas


Cercotrichas is a genus of medium-sized insectivorous birds. They were formerly considered to be in the thrush family,, but are more often now treated as part of the Old World flycatcher family,.

Taxonomy

The genus Cercotrichas was introduced in 1831 by the German zoologist Friedrich Boie. The type species was subsequently designated as Turdus erythropterus Gmelin which is a junior synonym of Turdus podobe Müller, the black [scrub robin]. The genus name Cercotrichas is from Ancient Greek kerkos meaning "tail" and trikhas meaning "thrush".
This genus formerly included additional species. A molecular phylogenetic study of the Muscicapidae by Min Zhao and collaborators published in 2023 found that the genus Cercotrichas was paraphyletic. In the rearrangement to create monophyletic genera five species were moved to the resurrected genus Tychaedon that had been introduced in 1917 by the American ornithologist Charles Richmond.
Scrub robins are mainly African species of open woodland or scrub, which nest in bushes or on the ground, but the rufous-tailed scrub robin also breeds in southern Europe and east to Pakistan.
The genus contains the following five species:
ImageCommon nameScientific nameDistribution
Kalahari scrub robinCercotrichas paenaKalahari Desert to Kaokoveld
Black scrub robinCercotrichas podobeSahel and montane Arabian Peninsula
Rufous-tailed scrub robinCercotrichas galactotessouthwestern Palearctic, Central Asia, Sahel and Horn of Africa
Brown-backed scrub robinCercotrichas hartlaubisparsely present across central Africa
White-browed scrub robinCercotrichas leucophrysSub-Saharan Africa