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 LC    Parasitic Weaver* Id (Atlas):
    Anomalospiza imberbis

Description (10)
Image of Parasitic Weaver
 

Other Names (World)
Cuckoo-finch, Cuckoo Finch, Parasitic Weaver, Cuckoo Weaver, Yellow Swamp Finch, Canary-like Bishop Finch

Family
Viduidae (Whydahs And Indigobirds)

Size
11 cm

First Described (Guide)
(Cabanis, 1868)

Habitat
Subtropical and tropical seasonally wet / flooded grassland. From 500 - 1,800 m.

Range (Guide)
Angola, Benin, Botswana (B), Cameroon, Congo [The Democratic Republic of the] (B), Congo [The Democratic Republic of the], Côte dIvoire, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Kenya, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, South Africa, Sudan, Swaziland, Tanzania [United Republic of], Togo, Uganda, Zambia, Zimbabwe.

Vagrant to Gambia, Mali.

Population
Estimated population is unknown (2010).

Status LC
For more information see BirdLife International Species Factsheet.

Voice
Xeno-Canto Sound Files (more (4)...)

 
Cuckoo-finch (Anomalospiza imberbis) [XC338911]
     by Peter Boesman from North of Kawambwa, Luapula province, Zambia (call)

 
Cuckoo-finch (Anomalospiza imberbis) [XC338914]
     by id from Chiengi area, Luapula province, Zambia (song)

Subspecies
First described as a canary (Fringillidae), then placed in weaverbird family (Ploceidae), and then united with some weaverbirds (those with short outer primary and sexually dimorphic plumage) in a subfamily Viduinae of the waxbill family (Estrildidae). Regarded as a ploceid through most of 20th century, but recent studies of morphology and molecular genetics indicate close relationship with Vidua. Subspecies intergrade and poorly defined, with no constant distinction in size and plumage, and species sometimes treated as monotypic. Also, individual variation in size apparent.

Proposed subspecies tibatiensis (described from western Africa) subsumed in butleri, and macmillani (from Ethiopia), makandakunae (western Zambia) and nyasae (Malawi) synonymized with nominate.

The following 2 subspecies are recognised:

  • butleri (Cabanis, 1868)   -  Gambia, southern Mali (inner R Niger Delta), Sierra Leone and Liberia eastern patchily to Nigeria and Cameroon; southern Sudan and north-eastern DRCongo (Uele).
  • imberbis (Cabanis, 1868)   -  Patchily in Ethiopia, eastern Africa, southern DRCongo (Kasai, Katanga) and northern and south-eastern Angola south to northern and eastern South Africa.



References
See References.


Files:
JPG files for Parasitic Weaver (Anomalospiza imberbis) - 10 files


More Information

BirdLife International

For more information about the Parasitic Weaver see... Show Articles BirdLife International Species Factsheet.


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