- Greater Honeyguide
Taxobox
name = Greater Honeyguide
image_caption =
status = LC | status_system = IUCN3.1
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Aves
ordo =Piciformes
familia = Indicatoridae
genus = "Indicator"
species = "I. indicator"
binomial = "Indicator indicator"
binomial_authority = (Sparrman, 1777)The Greater Honeyguide ("Indicator indicator") is abird in the family Indicatoridae, paleotropicalnear passerine bird s related to thewoodpecker s. Its English and scientific names refer to its habit of guiding people to bee colonies.The Greater Honeyguide is a resident breeder in
sub-Saharan Africa . It is found in a variety of habitats that have trees, especially dry open woodland, but not in the West African jungle.Description
The Greater Honeyguide is about 20cm long and weighs about 50 g. Like all
Africa n honeyguides, it has bold white patches on the sides of the tail. The male has dark grey-brown upperparts and white underparts, with a black throat. The wings are streaked whitish, and there is a yellow shoulder patch. The bill is pink.The female is duller and lacks the black throat. Her bill is blackish. Immature birds are very distinctive, having olive-brown upperparts with a white rump and yellow throat and upper breast.
Diet
Bee colonies
The Greater Honeyguide feeds primarily on the contents of bee colonies ("hives"):
bee eggs,larva e andpupa e;waxworm s; andbeeswax . (Honeyguides are among the few birds that can digest wax.) It frequently associates with other honeyguides at hives; immatures dominate adults, and immatures of this species dominate all others. Like other honeyguides, the Greater Honeyguide enters hives while the bees are torpid in the early morning, feeds at abandoned hives (African bees desert more often than those of the temperate zones), and scavenges at hives robbed by people or other large animals, notably theRatel or honey badger. Most remarkably, it also guides people to hives.Guiding is unpredictable and is more common among immatures and females than adult males. A guiding bird attracts a person's attention with wavering, chattering "'tya' notes compounded with peeps or pipes" (Short and Horne 2002a), sounds it also gives in aggression. The guiding bird flies toward an occupied hive (Greater Honeyguides know the sites of many hives in their territories) and then stops and calls again. As in other situations, it spreads its tail, showing the white spots, and has a "bounding, upward flight to a perch", which make it conspicuous. If the followers are native
honey -hunters, when they reach the hive they incapacitate the adult bees with smoke and open the hive with axes or "pangas" (machete s). After they take the honey, the honeyguide eats whatever is left. The tradition of the Bushmen and most other tribes says that the honeyguide must be thanked with a gift of honey; if not, it may lead its follower to alion , bullelephant , or venomoussnake as punishment. However, "others maintain that honeycomb spoils the bird, and leave it to find its own bits of comb" (Short, Horne, and Diamond 2003).Guiding of non-human animals?
Many sources, such as Attenborough (1998), the African Wildlife Foundation, Estes (1999), and Zimmerman, Turner, and Pearson (1999), say that this species also guides
Ratel s. Friedmann (1955, quoted by Harper) notes that Sparrman said in the 18th century that indigenous Africans reported this interaction, but Friedmann adds that no biologist has seen it. According to Dean and MacDonald (1981), Friedmann does quote reports that Greater Honeyguides guidebaboon s and speculates that the behavior evolved in relation to these species before the appearance of humanity. However, they state,In addition to that listed by Friedmann (1955:41-47), the only recent record is of a Greater Honeyguide giving its guiding call to baboons at Wankie Game Reserve, Zimbabwe (C. J. Vernon, pers. comm.). However, Vernon did not see a positive response by the baboons to the honeyguide. No additional records of honeyguides and Ratels have been reported since Friedmann (1955) and the first-hand accounts given in his review in support of this association are all of incomplete guiding sequences. No biologist has ever reported this association.
Dean and MacDonald go on to express doubt that honeyguides guide other animals and suggest that the behavior may have evolved with "early man". Short and Horne (2002b) agree, noting that bee colonies are seasonally very common in Africa and Ratels probably have no trouble finding them.
Another argument against guiding of non-human animals is that near cities, where Africans increasingly buy
sugar rather than hunting for wild honey, guiding behavior is disappearing. Ultimately it may disappear everywhere (Short, Horne, and Diamond 2003).Other food
The Greater Honeyguide also catches some flying insects, especially swarming
termite s. It sometimes follows mammals or birds to catch the insects they flush, and joins mixed-species flocks in ones and twos. It has been known to eat the eggs of small birds.Reproduction
In addition to being a
predator of insects and a mutualist with its follower species, the Greater Honeyguide is abrood parasite . It lays white eggs in series of 3 to 7, for a total of 10 to 20 in a year. Each egg is laid in a different nest of a bird of another species, including some woodpeckers,barbet s,kingfisher s,bee-eater s,woodhoopoe s,starling s, and large swallows. All the species parasitized nest in holes, covered nests, or deep cup nests. The chick has a membranous hook on the bill that it uses, while still blind and featherless, to kill the host's young outright or by repeated wounds.References
* Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
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*cite web | last = Harper | first = W. Ed | title = Honeyguides | date = 2003 | publisher = Don Roberson | work = Bird Families of the World | url = http://www.montereybay.com/creagrus/honeyguides.html | accessdate = 2006-03-22
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*cite web | title = Ratel | publisher = The African Wildlife Foundation | work = Wildlives: African Animals | url = http://www.awf.org/content/wildlife/detail/1019/ | accessdate = 2007-05-31Further reading
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