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ViewsCape Rock-ThrushFrom Opus
[edit] IdentificationLength 21-22 cm, mass about 60 g. Adult male: Blue-grey head and throat contrast with rufous-orange underparts. Upperparts are mostly dark brown and rufous. The bill is black, the eyes brown, and the legs brown to black. Adult female: Similar to the male, except that the underparts are duller and the head is mainly brown, streaked black, with white markings on the face and throat. Juvenile: Brown with buff mottles above, and rufous with black mottles below. The male Sentinel Rock-Thrush is similar to the male Cape Rock Thrush, but the blue grey of the head extends to the back and upper breast. The male Short-toed Rock-Thrush has a blue-grey back and a whitish crown. [edit] DistributionEastern and southern South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland. Some altitudinal migration in populations that breed at high altitudes. [edit] TaxonomyMonotypic. [edit] HabitatCliffs and rocky slopes, and sometimes human settlements. [edit] BehaviourSolitary, in pairs, or in family groups. Forages mainly for invertebrates on the ground; also eats seeds and fruit. Attracted to burnt vegetation. Perches on rocks, shrubs or poles to sing or when alarmed. Breeding: The cup-shaped nest is built in a crevice or on a ledge on a cliff or building; Two to four eggs are laid in summer (September to February). [edit] ReferencesHockey PAR, Dean WRJ & Ryan PG (eds) 2005. Robert's Birds of Southern Africa, 7th edition. John Voelcker Bird Book Fund, Cape Town, South Africa. ISBN 0620340533 [edit] External Links
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