Blue-naped mousebird
The blue-naped mousebird, also formerly called the blue-naped coly is a species of bird belonging to the family Coliidae within the order Coliiformes. They are the sister group to the clade Eucavitaves, which contains the families Leptosomiformes, Trogoniformes, Bucerotiformes, Piciformes and Coraciformes.
The species is found in the wild in the drier regions of West Africa to East Africa, as well as Sahel. It is one of the remaining six species of mousebirds. The term "mousebird" comes from its habit of running along branches in a way that resembles the scurrying of a mouse.
Taxonomy
There are a total of six recognized subspecies:- Urocolius macrourus macrourus
- Urocolius macrourus syntactus
- Urocolius macrourus laeneni
- Urocolius macrourus pulcher
- Urocolius macrourus abyssinicus
- 'Urocolius macrourus griseogularis'''''
Description
The blue-naped mousebird is a fairly small to medium-sized bird, measuring in length including the elongated tail of, weighing. Adults have an ash grey plumage which is darker at top and lighter at bottom. Has a bright turquoise-blue patch on nape and hindneck, long crest, slender and steeply graduated tail, females shorter than males. Both sexes are brown-tinged ash-grey above, greyish-buff below; bare skin on lores and around eyes crimson-red; most of upper mandible crimson-red, rest of bill black; feet purplish red. Juveniles lack the blue on nape, and have pink facial skin and greenish bills, as well as shorter crest.Characteristic of mousebirds, the blue-naped mousebird has widely spaced and large feet for its body size, which are pamprodactylous; they are able to rotate all four toes to face forward at will. Their toes are strong and dextrous, allowing the birds to climb and scurry along branches, to hang by a toenail, or to use one foot to hold food.
Distribution and habitat
In the wild, these birds live in the semi-desert and dry regions of Africa. In East Africa are found in a band between 10°N and 20°N from the western coast to Sudan, Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia and Somalia in the East and south 10°N through East Africa and on to the Eastern Zaire borders. This species has an extremely large range, and hence does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the range size criterion.Conservation status
Despite the fact that the population trend appears to be decreasing, the decline is not believed to be sufficiently rapid to approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population trend criterion. The population size has not been quantified, but it is not believed to approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population size criterion. For these reasons the species is evaluated as least concern.Behaviour
Vocalizations
Solitary birds perched atop trees emit a distinct and resonant "tieee" whistle every 3–5 seconds. While foraging, it produces a shorter and less robust version of the same call, spaced at longer intervals of 10–15 seconds. In groups, a pre-flight ritual includes a collective "trie-trie" before departing the feeding area, or a rhythmic "tsie-tsie..." every 0.5 seconds just prior to takeoff. In flight, the sound transforms into variations like "trui-tru-tri", "triu-triu", or "tri-truu-truu...". A begging female vocalizes a unique sequence, described as "cruir-uu-tuit-truit", during courtship while the male utters a series of "tiuee-tuiee..." notes at a rate of six every approximately 10 seconds. Perched birds contribute to the auditory landscape with occasional weak trills and individual notes.Movement
The birds are mostly sedentary, with occasional local nomadic behavior. Particularly in Senegal, Mali, Kenya, and Tanzania, routine dry-season movements occur, where they transition from savanna woodland to river valleys and populated areas. Infrequent sightings of the species in Benin, Gambia, and Guinea-Bissau are likely the outcomes of these movements.Diet
Primarily, these birds rely on fruits as their main food source, and they also eat leaves, flowers, and buds. Bird have been seen foraging for food together, one of the few common arboreal bird species to do so In some regions like Niger and Chad, the berries of the Salvadora persica plant are especially crucial. Other plants they utilize include Balaenites aegyptiaca, Capparis decidua, Boscia senegalensis, Grewia villosa, Tamarindus, and Ficus. Additionally, they consume dates and various cultivated fruits, with a preference for those from the Azadirachta indica tree, commonly found in towns.These birds are often seen in groups of up to ten individuals, but sometimes as many as 50 may gather around a single fruiting tree. They move in flocks, traveling from one known fruiting tree to another, stopping to forage every 20–200 meters. They follow the same route at the same time each day.