Mocking cliff chat

Mocking cliff chat

Mocking chat, Cliff chat

Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Family
Genus
SPECIES
Thamnolaea cinnamomeiventris

The mocking cliff chat, mocking chat or cliff chat, (Thamnolaea cinnamomeiventris ) is a species of chat in the family Muscicapidae which occurs in rocky habitats in much of eastern Sub-Saharan Africa.

Appearance

The mocking cliff chat is a large chat with distinctive colouration. The male has a glossy black with a chestnut belly, vent, and rump and white shoulder patches. The shoulder patches vary in size geographically. The female is dark grey with a chestnut lower breast, belly, and vent. The mocking cliff chat has a length of 19–21 cm and weigh 41–51g.

Distribution

Geography

The mocking cliff chat occurs in a neat band from central Ethiopia in the north through east Africa into Zimbabwe, south-eastern Botswana, southern Mozambique and eastern South Africa as far as the far east of Western Cape province. Mostly resident but in the south of its range tends to move to lower altitudes in the winter months.

Show More

The mocking cliff chat inhabits rocky and boulder strewn areas, well-wooded rocky ravines, cliffs, gullies, boulder-strewn hillsides and watercourses in valley bottoms with scattered rocks.

Show Less

Habits and Lifestyle

The mocking cliff chat is mainly insectivorous but also eats fruit and feeds on the nectar of aloes, such as the Krantz aloe Aloe arborescens. It chief foraging technique is to pounce on food on the ground from a perch bit it will also glean food from branches and foliage. The habitually wag their tails, slowly raising over their backs and fanning it out.

Show More

Both sexes build the nest, taking about a week to construct an open cup built over a foundation of twigs, leaves, roots and feathers and lined with the hair of mammals. They often use the nests of striped swallows frequently evicting the swallows while they are still using the nest. The nest is usually positioned below a rock overhang, bridge, culvert or in a cave and it may sometimes be placed in a hole in a wall or in a cavity in agricultural machinery.In southern Africa the eggs are laid from August–December, with a peak during September–November. The normal clutch size is 2-4 eggs, which the females incubates for about 14–16 days. Both parents feed the chicks which fledge at about three weeks old.

Show Less
Lifestyle
Seasonal behavior
Bird's call

Diet and Nutrition

Population

References

1. Mocking cliff chat Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mocking_cliff_chat
2. Mocking cliff chat on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/22710441/132088466
3. Xeno-canto bird call - https://xeno-canto.org/655513

More Fascinating Animals to Learn About