Black-crowned barwing
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Family
Genus
SPECIES
Actinodura sodangorum

The black-crowned barwing (Actinodura sodangorum ) is a non-migratory bird from Indochina in the family Leiothrichidae (laughingthrushes and allies). The name Actinodura is derived from Greek words meaning "ray-like tail" (actinodes and ura) while sodangorum came from the Södang tribe (also known as Xo Dang) which lives in Ngoc Linh and other areas in Vietnam, Cambodia and Laos where black-crowned barwings are distributed.

Appearance

The black-crowned barwing is the only bird in the Actinodura to have a black crown. It has transverse barring on the wings (wingbars) and presence of a crest, which are characters of the Genus Actinodura (barwings).

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The colouration in black-crowned barwings is similar between the sexes. They have a grey head and nape, black crown and lore (space between eye and beak), white eye rings, dark brown irises, and dark beak with a flesh coloured tip. Its throat is streaked with black-brown on a base of rufous-orange that matches the breast and belly area. The posterior parts of the body (mantle, back, rump, and uppertail coverts) are olive-brown with indistinct dark bars. The wings have fine bars on the scapulars (upper wing section) and black-brown with chestnut or orange-buff bars on most of the flight feathers (primaries and secondaries). Their long tail is graduated chestnut with white tips and broad black bars.

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Distribution

Geography

Continents
Countries
Biogeographical realms

They are residents of three locations in Laos and 7 locations in Vietnam. They are also found in Important Bird and Biodiversity Areas (IBA) including the DakChung Plateau, Lo Xo Pass, and Ngoc Linh.

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Their natural habitats are subtropical or tropical moist montane forest, subtropical or tropical high-altitude shrubland, subtropical or tropical high-altitude grassland, and plantations. Although they use degraded/cleared forests, they are mostly found in secondary growth or evergreen forests.

Their elevation maximum was at 2400m, with observers noting less sightings above 2200m. The minimum elevation range could not be determined properly since the site contained loss of forest habitat below 1500m, though there were sightings at 1000m.

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Habits and Lifestyle

Sightings have been either of single birds or in pairs.

Lifestyle
Seasonal behavior

Diet and Nutrition

Their diet is not well known, but they are suspected to be insectivores that also eat vegetation. The bird is often seen foraging alone or with a partner around the smaller branches of tree canopy, trunk, and along larger moss-covered branches.

Mating Habits

Mates are first attracted through calling, then move to small branches in shrubs while perching close or against each other. The male displays by raising his crest and half-fanning his feathers while the female opens her wings less frequently and leans steeply over her perch. They preen each other briefly and rapidly with light pecking, while switching positions. Instances of copulating or almost copulating involved the birds swinging full circle around a branch where their tail-bases would briefly touch while moving downwards. This behaviour is not known in barwings, but is more common in babblers (family Timaliidae).

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Generation lengths are around 5.5 years.

Eggs and nest are undescribed.

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Population

Population number

It is threatened by habitat loss and is considered Near Threatened on the IUCN Red List.

References

1. Black-crowned barwing Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black-crowned_barwing
2. Black-crowned barwing on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/22716552/177885722

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