Woodward's batis

Woodward's batis

Woodwards' batis, Zululand batis

Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Genus
SPECIES
Batis fratrum

Woodward's batis (Batis fratrum ), also known as Woodwards' batis or the Zululand batis, is a species of small bird in the wattle-eyes family, Platysteiridae. It occurs in southeastern Africa where it is found in woodlands and forests.

Appearance

Woodward's batis is 10.5 cm (4.1 in) in length and weighs 10.3–13.8 g (0.36–0.49 oz). It is a small active bird which is similar to a flycatcher and shows the typical patterns and plumage colours of the genus Batis. It is blue-grey above with a short white supercilium, black mask on the face, an orange-red eyes and the tail is black with the outer tail fathers edged white and all of the tail feathers except the middle two are tipped with white.

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It is sexually dimorphic and the male shows white on the wing strip, chin and throat while his breast and upper belly are pale rufous. The female has a browner more olive grey upperparts, pale reddish brown wing stripe and underparts while juveniles are similar but with an indistinct face mask. The bill and the legs are black.

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Distribution

Geography

Continents
Biogeographical realms

Woodward's batis is endemic to southeastern Africa from the extreme north east of KwaZulu Natal in South Africa, north along coastal northern Mozambique and southern Malawi and inland to the remnant forests of south eastern Zimbabwe.

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Woodward's batis prefers lowland and evergreen forest as well as dense acacia woodland, sand forest, riparian forest and miombo woodland. In Malawi its range extends up to 600 m (2,000 ft).

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Habits and Lifestyle

Woodward's batis actively and continuously forages throughout the day, capturing insect prey by gleaning it from twigs, leaves and branches, typically while hovering in mid-air.

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The nest is the typical batis loosely-constructed shallow cup, made out of rootlets, tendrils, fragments of dead leaves and sometimes lichen, bound together with strands of spider web. Unusually for this genus it is usually placed amongst creepers or leaves and rarely in a tree fork. The 1–3 eggs are laid from October to November and these are probably incubated solely by the female, as with most other batises.

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Lifestyle
Seasonal behavior
Bird's call

References

1. Woodward's batis Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodward's_batis
2. Woodward's batis on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/22707858/94139750
3. Xeno-canto bird call - https://xeno-canto.org/518648

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