Fan Of Birds

Fan Of Birds

Sunday, April 13, 2014

Bateleur

Bateleur - Kuglarz


Africa, Botswana, Okavango Delta, 2012
Description
The Bateleur is a colorful species with a very short tail which, together with its white under wing coverts, makes it unmistakable in flight. The tail is so small the bird's legs protrude slightly beyond the tail during flight. The Bateleur is sexually dimorphic; both adults have black plumage, a chestnut mantle and tail, grey shoulders, tawny wing coverts, and red facial skin, bill and legs. The female additionally has tawny secondary wing feathers. Immature birds are brown with white dappling and have greenish facial skin. It takes them seven or eight years to reach full maturity. The bird spends a considerable amount of time on the wing, particularly in low-altitude glides. Incredibly, the Bateleur may spend as much as 80 percent of the day in flight, covering up to 500 kilometers, as it searches for food. Flying relatively low, this species scans the ground for signs of food and, when sighted, it descends in a tight spiral to investigate. When not in flight, the Bateleur can be seen perching on branches or standing on the ground with its wings outstretched, absorbing the heat from the sun.



Habitat

The Bateleur has an extensive range, encompassing most of Africa, from Mauritania in the west, across to Sudan in the east, and stretching north to Egypt and south to South Africa. The Bateleur mainly occupies savanna and open- and closed-canopy woodland, favoring broad-leaved woodland with long grass. Rarely in heavily wooded areas, mountainous areas and largely treeless habitats, but penetrates semi-desert shrub land with tall drainage-line woodland.
Voice
The Bateleur is generally silent, but on occasions it produces a variety of barks and screams.
Sounds of Bateleur

Diet
Bateleurs are hunters and scavengers; birds such as pigeons and sangrouse are preferred prey items, although it may attack small mammals. Their diet includes antelope, mice, birds, snakes, and carrion. Bateleur eagles spend 8-9 hours each day in the air looking for food.
Reproduction
The Bateleur breeds in December–March. It constructs a well-concealed nest in trees, laying a single egg. Mother incubates the egg while father collects food and sticks for the nest. Sometimes, however, the father incubates. After an incubation period of 52-59 days, the chick hatches. 110 days later, the hatchling fledges, but will continue to receive food from its parents for another 100 days. Only 2% of chicks make it to adulthood. Bateleurs pair for life, and will use the same nest for a number of years. Unpaired birds, presumably from a previous clutch, will sometimes help at the nest.

Did you know?
The Mbuti tribe believes that if a pregnant woman or her husband eat this bird, a baby with an extraordinary large head may be born to them.

The Temba tribe of the Congo consider the species as a cure. Its feathers and claws are used to cure benign epilepsy. For the medical treatment, feathers and claws of this bird are burnt and inhaled by the patient. Only old people can eat it. Also this bird makes noise while flying, like the wind. It sometimes carries away two-to three-year-old infants of goat, monkey, or hare.

The Zulu in South Africa believe that when creation began, when the tree of life produced living things, the first bird to fall off the tree of life, was the Ingonghulu, the Bateleur. To signal the birth of creation, the Ingonghulu extended her wings and beat them, GHU-GHU-GHU, and creation was announced. You were not allowed to kill this bird. It enjoyed the direct protection of the king of the Zulus. You were not allowed to harm this bird of victory. If it arrived in your area, it was immediately announced to the king that an Ingonghulu is nesting in such and such a place, and the king used to come there with his people and conduct a sacred ceremony there, to which no ordinary people were invited.


Photos by others


 



Credits
Wikipedia, Plenetofbirds.com, Arkive.com, Birds of Brazil (Wildlife Conservation Society)

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