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 LC    Welcome Swallow* Id (Atlas):
    Hirundo neoxena

Description (10)
Image of Welcome Swallow
 

Other Names (World)
Welcome Swallow, Swallow, Australian Swallow, Australian Welcome Swallow, House Swallow, Pacific Swallow (tahitica)

Family
Hirundinidae (Swallows And Martins)

Size
14 - 15 cm

First Described (Guide)
Gould, 1843

Derivation
Hi-run'-do - L., Hirundo, a swallow: ne-ox'-en-a - Gk, neos, new; Gk, xenos, strange

Habitat
Mostly aerial above open woodlands, grasslands, coasts, rivers, wetlands.

Range (Guide)
Australia (B), New Zealand (B).

Vagrant to New Caledonia, Papua New Guinea.

Population
Estimated population is unknown (2010).

Status LC
For more information see BirdLife International Species Factsheet.

Habits
Singly or in twos but most often in flocks of from 30 to several hundred.

Food
Invertebrates, mainly insects, including flies, beetles, wasps, ants and moths.

Voice
A single 'chip' usually uttered in flight. A spirited, twittering song,rsing 'seep, seep, seep. A high-pitched, puny 'seeet' uttered in alarm.



Xeno-Canto Sound Files (more (38)...)

 
Welcome Swallow (Hirundo neoxena) [XC733564]
     by James Lidster from Paroo Darling National Park, New South Wales, Australia (call)

 
Welcome Swallow (Hirundo neoxena) [XC604137]
     by Marc Anderson from 218 Old Boonjie Road, Topaz, Tablelands Regional, Queensland, Australia (begging call, call, flight call, hatchling or nestling)

Nest
Cup-shaped, composed of mud pellets reinforced with small pieces of grass, lined with grass, horse-hair, and feathers, built under the eaves of buildings, verandas, bridges and in caves and mine shafts.

Eggs (Guide)
4 - 6, usually 4 or 5; white, freckled and spotted red-brown, usually at larger end; oval; about 19 x 13 mm. Incubation: 13 - 22 days; mostly by female.

Young
Altricial, nidicolous. Fledge in about 12 - 30 days, usually 17 - 23 days. Fed by both parents.

Subspecies
Tahiti Swallow (Hirundo tahitica) and Welcome Swallow (Hirundo neoxena) (Sibley and Monroe 1990, 1993), cross-regional species, are retained as separate species contra Turbott (1990) who includes neoxena as a subspecies of Tahiti Swallow (Hirundo tahitica). The BirdLife Taxonomic Working Group is aware that phylogenetic analyses have been published which have proposed generic rearrangements which may affect this species, but prefers to wait until work by other taxonomists reveals how these changes affect the entire groups involved.

Forms a superspecies with Barn Swallow (Hirundo rustica), Red-chested Swallow (Hirundo lucida), Angola Swallow (Hirundo angolensis), Tahiti Swallow (Hirundo tahitica), White-throated Swallow (Hirundo albigularis) and Ethiopian Swallow (Hirundo aethiopica). Sometimes treated as conspecific with Tahiti Swallow (Hirundo tahitica), but differs morphologically (especially in bill size and in tail structure and markings). Subspecies poorly defined; tail length increases slightly from south-eastern Australia west to Eyre Peninsula and decreases in western Australia, more so in males than in females. Proposed subspecies parsonsi from north-eastern Australia (eastern Queensland), supposedly with less white in tail, considered indistinguishable.

Considered by some authors to be a subspecies of Tahiti Swallow (Hirundo tahitica).

The following 2 subspecies are recognised:

  • neoxena Gould, 1843   -  South-eastern Australia, Tasmania and islands in Bass Strait, west to the head of the Great Australian Bight and north to southern Lake Eyre and northern Murray - Darling River Drainage basins, and along the eastern coast to Rockingham Bay, Qld, Lord Howe and Norfolk Islands, NI, SI and Stewart Islands, New Zealand, a straggler to Kermadec and Chatham Islands, wintering throughout eastern Australia, north to Cape York Peninsula and Torres Strait islands.
  • carteri (Mathews, 1912)   -  South-western Australia, north to North West Cape, WA, north-east to the upper reaches of the Murchison River Drainage Basin, WA and east to around head of the Great Australian Bight, wintering north through all Pilbara, WA to south-western Great Sandy Desert.



References
See References.

The Field Guide to the Birds of Australia Pizzey, G., and Knight, E., 1997, Angus & Robertson, Sydney ISBN 0 207 19691 5
Field Guide to Australian Birds Morecombe, M., 2000, Steve Parish Publishing Pty Ltd. ISBN 1 876282 10 X
Field Guide to the Birds of Australia Simpson, K., and Day, N., 1999, 6th Edition, Viking ISBN 0 670 87918 5
Reader's Digest Complete Book of Australian Birds 1988, 2nd Edition, Reader's Digest ISBN 0 949819 99 9
What Bird is That? 1984, Revised Edition, Angus & Robertson, Sydney ISBN 0 207 14846 5
Handbook of Australian, New Zealand & Antarctic Birds 1990 - , Oxford University Press, Melbourne ISBN 0 19 553244 9


Files:
JPG files for Welcome Swallow (Hirundo neoxena) - 10 filesMP3 files for Welcome Swallow (Hirundo neoxena) - 1 files


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