*** Welcome to piglix ***

Phedina borbonica

Mascarene martin
Mascarene Martin RWD.jpg
At Ranomafana, Madagascar
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Hirundinidae
Genus: Phedina
Species: P. borbonica
Binomial name
Phedina borbonica
(Gmelin, 1789)
Map showing the breeding areas in Africa
Approximate range in Africa

  Resident   Non-breeding

Synonyms

Cotyle borbonica Gmelin, 1789
Hirundo borbonica. Bonaparte, 1850.


  Resident   Non-breeding

Cotyle borbonica Gmelin, 1789
Hirundo borbonica. Bonaparte, 1850.

The Mascarene martin or Mascarene swallow (Phedina borbonica) is a passerine bird in the swallow family that breeds in Madagascar and in the Mascarene Islands. The nominate subspecies occurs on Mauritius and Réunion and has never been found away from the Mascarene Islands, but the smaller Madagascan subspecies, P. b. madagascariensis, is migratory and has been recorded wintering in East Africa or wandering to other Indian Ocean islands.

The Mascarene martin is a small swallow that has grey-brown underparts becoming white on the throat and lower abdomen, dark grey-brown upperparts and a slightly forked tail. The underparts are heavily streaked with black. It nests in small colonies anywhere with suitably sheltered sites for constructing a nest, such as ledges, buildings, tunnels, caves or amongst rocks. The nest is a shallow cup of twigs and other plant material, and the normal clutch is two or three brown-spotted white eggs. The incubation and fledging times are unknown. The Mascarene martin has a heavy flight with slow wingbeats interspersed with glides, and frequently perches on wires. It feeds on insects in flight, often hunting low over the ground or vegetation. In eastern Africa, open habitats such as deforested areas are frequently used for hunting. A number of internal and external parasites have been detected in this species.


...
Wikipedia

...