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African broadbill

African broadbill
African broadbill, Smithornis capensis.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Eurylaimidae
Genus: Smithornis
Species: S. capensis
Binomial name
Smithornis capensis
(Smith, 1839)
Synonyms

Platyrhynchus capensis A. Smith, 1839


Platyrhynchus capensis A. Smith, 1839

The African broadbill, also known as the Black-capped Broadbill or Delacour's broadbill (Smithornis capensis) is a species of bird in the sub-oscine family Eurylaimidae.

The African broadbill is a boldly streaked, largely brown, stocky flycatcher like bird. They have dark crowns which are black in the males and grey in the females of the eastern subspecies and blackish in both sexes of the subspecies S.c. meinertzhageni. The upperparts are mainly olive-brown with black streaks, the bases of the feathers on the lower back and rump are white and are hidden when the bird is at rest. The underparts are buff or creamy-white with black streaks on the flanks and the breast. There is subspecific variation with S.c. meinertzhageni and S.c. suahelicus being whiter below with thicker streaks than, for example S.c. mefianus. It measures 12–14 cm in length and in South Africa males weighed 21–26.9g and females 17.4–27.5 g.

The African broadbill has a very loud call which has been compared to an old fashioned car horn. It is loud, vibrating "Prrrrup" which is made either during a display flight or at rest, and it may be interspersed with softer more plaintive "tui-tui-tui" call, which is also sometimes made without the car horn call.

Unusually, the call of the African broadbill, like other Smithornis birds, is produced by the vibration of its wings during flight, the sound being produced by the sixth and seventh primary feathers.

The African Broadbill is native to Africa, especially the southeastern part of the continent. There are two separate allopatric distributions, one rather disjunct distribution in coastal West Africa from Sierra Leone in the west eastwards to the Central African Republic and south to Gabon and the northern Congo. The main distribution covers southern and eastern Africa from Kenya south to KwaZulu Natal.


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