Speckled mousebird
The speckled mousebird is the largest species of mousebird, as well as one of the most common. It is found throughout most of Central, Eastern and Southern Africa.
Taxonomy
The speckled mousebird was formally described in 1789 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae. He placed it with the mousebirds in the genus Colius and coined the binomial name Colius striatus. Gmelin based his description on the "Coliou rayé" that had been described in 1778 by the French polymath Comte de Buffon from a specimen that had been collected near the Cape of Good Hope in South Africa.Seventeen subspecies are recognised:C. s. nigricollis Vieillot, 1817 – Ghana and Nigeria to southwest Central African Republic and south to west Angola and southwest DR CongoC. s. leucophthalmus Chapin, 1921 – north DR Congo, southeast Central African Republic and southwest SudanC. s. leucotis Rüppell, 1839 – east Sudan, Eritrea and west, central EthiopiaC. s. hilgerti Zedlitz, 1910 – southwest Djibouti, northeast Ethiopia and northwest SomaliaC. s. jebelensis Mearns, 1915 – south Sudan, northeast DR Congo and north UgandaC. s. mombassicus Van Someren, 1919 – south Somalia to northeast TanzaniaC. s. kikuyensis Van Someren, 1919 – central Kenya and north TanzaniaC. s. cinerascens Neumann, 1900 – west, central TanzaniaC. s. affinis Shelley, 1885 – east Tanzania to northeast Zimbabwe and north MozambiqueC. s. berlepschi Hartert, EJO, 1899 – southwest Tanzania to northeast Zambia and MalawiC. s. kiwuensis Reichenow, 1908 – east DR Congo, central, south Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi and northwest TanzaniaC. s. congicus Reichenow, 1923 – east Angola to south, southeast DR Congo and west ZambiaC. s. simulans Clancey, 1979 – central Mozambique and southeast MalawiC. s. integralis Clancey, 1957 – northeast South Africa, southeast Zimbabwe and south MozambiqueC. s. rhodesiae Grant, CHB & Mackworth-Praed, 1938 – east Zimbabwe and west MozambiqueC. s. minor Cabanis, 1876 – east South Africa and Eswatini (formerly Swaziland)C. s. striatus Gmelin, JF, 1789 – south South Africa
Description
The speckled mousebird is about long, with the tail comprising approximately half the length, and weighs about. It is well-named, because it is dull-mousy brown in overall color on the back and on the head. The bill is black on the upper part and is a pinkish color on the lower part. The subspecies mainly differ in the contrast on the head, the throat colour, the amount of barring and the iris colour.The rare white-headed mousebird can be confused with this species, but the differently colored mandibles and the lack of a bare grey orbital patch render the speckled species distinctive.
The speckled mousebird is not known for its voice, as songbirds are, although it is a noisy creature. They make a warbling tsu-tsu call while in flight, and are known for their tisk-tisk alarm call while in flight.