- Brown-headed Apalis
Taxobox
name = Brown-headed Apalis
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Aves
ordo =Passeriformes
familia =Cisticolidae
genus = "Apalis "
species = "A. alticola"
binomial = "Apalis alticola"
binomial_authority = (Shelley, 1899)The Brown-headed Apalis ("Apalis alticola") is a small
passerine bird belonging to the genus "Apalis " in the familyCisticolidae . It is sometimes included within theGrey Apalis ("A. cinerea") but is now commonly considered to be a separate species. It has twosubspecies : "A. a. alticola" and "A. a. dowsetti"It is 12-13 cm long with a long tail and fairly long, slender bill. The legs and feet are pinkish and the eye is pale orange. The upperparts are grey-brown, becoming chocolate-brown on the crown and cheeks. The underparts are whitish. The adult male and female are alike; juvenile birds are more olive above and slightly yellowish below. In "A. a. alticola", the outer tail-feathers have white tips and outer webs and the next three pairs of tail-feathers have small white tips. "A. a. dowsetti" has entirely white outer tail-feathers.
The Grey Apalis is similar but has a grey-brown head and dark eye. The outer tail-feathers are white like those of "A. a. dowsetti" but it does not overlap in range with that subspecies.
The song of the Brown-headed Apalis is a series of loud, high-pitched "chip" notes.
It has a patchy distribution in central and east
Africa . It inhabitsforest and secondary growth at mid to high altitudes. It is often seen in pairs or small groups and frequently joins other bird species inmixed-species feeding flock s. "A. a. alticola" occurs in parts ofAngola ,Zambia ,Malawi , south-easternDemocratic Republic of Congo ,Tanzania and theNguruman Escarpment in southernKenya . In locations where its range overlaps with the Grey Apalis, it is restricted to the forest edge. "A. a. dowsetti" is found only on theMarungu plateau in the Democratic Republic of Congo.References
*aut|Sinclair, Ian & Ryan, Peter (2003) "Birds of Africa south of the Sahara", Struik, Cape Town.
*aut|Zimmerman, Dale A.; Turner, Donald A. & Pearson, David J. (1999) "Birds of Kenya & Northern Tanzania", Christopher Helm, London.
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