Thick-billed weaver
The thick-billed weaver, or grosbeak weaver, is a distinctive and bold species of weaver bird that is native to the Afrotropics. It belongs to the monotypic genus Amblyospiza and subfamily Amblyospizinae.
They have particularly strong mandibles, which are employed to extricate the seeds in nutlets and drupes, and their songs are comparatively unmusical and harsh. Their colonial nests are readily distinguishable from those of other weavers, due to their form and placement, and the fine strands used in their construction.
They habitually fan and flick their tails.
Taxonomy and systematics
The generic name Amblyospiza was coined by Carl Jakob Sundevall in 1850 and means "blunt, finch", referencing the very large bill, while the specific name albifrons refers white forehead of the males. The thick-billed weaver was formally described as Pyrrhula albifrons in 1831 by the Irish zoologist and politician Nicholas Aylward Vigors from the collection of Henry Ellis, the specimens of which were attributed to Algoa Bay and environs in the Eastern Cape.Subspecies
Ten subspecies are currently recognized:- A. a. capitalba – discontinuously from south-eastern Guinea to southern Central African Republic and north-western Angola
- A. a. saturata Sharpe, 1908 – southern Nigeria to north-western Democratic Republic of Congo
- A. a. melanota – South Sudan and southern Ethiopia, through the rift valley and adjacent lowlands to north-western Tanzania
- A. a. montana van Someren, 1921 – Kenyan and Tanzanian interior, south-eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo to Malawi and Okavango Basin
- A. a. unicolor – East coast littoral from southern Somalia to Zanzibar and Pemba islands.
- A. a. tandae Bannerman, 1921 – north-western Angola and extreme western Democratic Republic of Congo
- A. a. kasaica Schouteden, 1953 – south-eastern Democratic Republic of Congo
- A. a. maxima Roberts, 1932 – south-eastern Angola, north-eastern Namibia, western Zambia, northern Botswana, extreme north-western Zimbabwe
- A. a. woltersi Clancey, 1956 – eastern Zimbabwe, southern Mozambique, north-eastern and eastern South Africa
- A. a. albifrons – eastern Zimbabwe and central Mozambique, southwards to eastern South Africa
Distribution and habitat
It has a patchy distribution in West, East and southern Africa, where it is present in marshes, uplands, suburban areas and artificial wetlands.Thick-billed weavers breed in reedy wetlands and can be found around forest edge outside the breeding season.