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词条 Ashy prinia
释义

  1. Description

  2. Distribution and habitat

  3. Behaviour and ecology

     Breeding 

  4. References

  5. Other sources

  6. External links

{{Speciesbox
|name=Ashy prinia
|status=LC
|status_system=IUCN3.1
|status_ref=[1]
|image=Ashy prinia or wren-warbler (Prinia socialis) Photograph by Shantanu Kuveskar.jpg
|image_caption= P. s. socialis showing tail graduation.
|genus=Prinia
|species=socialis
|authority=(Sykes, 1832)
|synonyms=Burnesia socialis
|range_map=PriniaSocialisMap.png
}}

The ashy prinia or ashy wren-warbler (Prinia socialis) is a small warbler in the family Cisticolidae.[2] This prinia is a resident breeder in the Indian Subcontinent, ranging across most of India, Nepal, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Sri Lanka and western Myanmar. It is a common bird in urban gardens and farmland in many parts of India and its small size, distinctive colours and upright tail make it easy to identify. The northern populations have a rufous rump and back and have a distinct breeding and non-breeding plumage while other populations lack such variation.

Description

These 13–14 cm long warblers have short rounded wings and longish graduated cream tail tipped with black subterminal spots. The tail is usually held upright and the strong legs are used for clambering about and hopping on the ground. They have a short black bill. The crown is grey and the underparts are rufous in most plumages. In breeding plumage, adults of the northern population are ash grey above, with a black crown and cheek with no supercilium and coppery brown wings. In non-breeding season, this population has a short and narrow white supercilium and the tail is longer.[3] They are found singly or in pairs in shrubbery and will often visit the ground.[4]

In winter, the northern subspecies, P. s. stewartii Blyth, 1847, has warm brown upperparts and a longer tail and has seasonal variation in plumage. The other races retain summer plumage all year round. West Bengal and eastwards has race inglisi Whistler & Kinnear, 1933 which is darker slaty above than the nominate race of the Peninsula and deeper rufous on the flanks with a finer and shorter beak. The distinctive endemic race in Sri Lanka, P. s. brevicauda Legge, 1879, has a shorter tail and has the juveniles with yellowish underparts apart from a distinct call.[3]

Distribution and habitat

This passerine bird is found in dry open grassland, open woodland, scrub and in home gardens in many cities. The northern limits of the species are along the Himalayan foothills extending into the upper Indus river system. The species is absent from the dry desert zone of the west of India and extends east into Burma. The Sri Lankan population is found mainly in the lowlands but going up into the hills to about 1600 m.[4]

Behaviour and ecology

Like most warblers, the ashy prinia is insectivorous. The song is a repetitive tchup, tchup, tchup or zeet-zeet-zeet. Another call is a nasal tee-tee-tee. It also makes a sound like "electric sparks" during its fluttery flight, which is thought to be produced by the wings (however, one author suggests that it is made by the beak).[3][4]

{{quote|

It is most easily distinguished by the loud snapping noise it makes during flight. How this noise is produced we do not know for certain. Reid was of opinion that the bird snapped its long tail. What exactly this means I do not know. Jesse believes that the sound is produced by the bird's mandibles. I have spent much time in watching the bird, and am inclined to think that the noise is caused by the beating of the wings against the tail. This last is constantly being wagged and jerked, and it seems to me that the wings beat against it as the bird flits about. When doves and pigeons fly, their wings frequently meet, causing a flapping sound. I am of opinion that something similar occurs when the ashy wren-warbler takes to its wings.|Douglas Dewar[5]}}

The non-migratory genus Prinia shows biannual moult, which is rare among passerines. A moult occurs in spring (April to May) and another moult occurs in autumn (October to November). Biannual moult is theorized to be favoured when ectoparasite loads are very high, however no investigations have been made. Prinia socialis moults some remiges twice a year and is termed to have a partially biannual moult,[6] however some authors describe P. socialis socialis as having two complete moults.[7]

Birds stay in pairs but roost singly on the branch of a small tree or shrub.[8]

Breeding

The song is sung from the top of a bush and males make fluttery display flights with the tail held up. The ashy prinia builds its nest close to the ground in a shrub or tall grass. Several types of nests have been described, including a flimsy cup made by sewing several large leaves, an oblong purse-like structure with grass stems inside it, and a flimsy ball of grass.[7][9] The usual nest is built low in a bush and consists of leaves stitched together with webs, lined with hair and having an entrance on the side.[10] It lays 3 to 5 glossy, somewhat oval-shaped eggs. They vary in colour from brick-red to rich chestnut. The broad end of the egg is generally darker than the remainder of the shell, and exhibits a cap or zone. The eggs measure 0.6 to 0.68 inches in length, and 0.45 to 0.5 in breadth.[11] They hatch in about 12 days.[12]

The breeding season varies with locality and has been recorded around the year, but mostly after the monsoons.[13] In north India it is mainly June to September and in Sri Lanka mainly December to March or August to October.[3] Breeds during May to June in the Nilgiris.[11] The species is believed to be monogamous and both the male and the female take part in incubation and feeding though to varying extents.[14] Parents may spend more time at the nest during cool days.[15][16] The eggs hatch in about 12 days.[13] Cuckoos Cacomantis merulinus and Cacomantis passerinus have been known to be brood parasites of this species.[17] When the nest is threatened by predators such as cats, adults have been observed feigning injury.[12]

Rare cases of birds reusing material from a nest to build a nest at a new location have been noted.[13]

{{Gallery
|Ashy Prinia, Lalbagh - Bangalore.jpg|In Lalbagh, Bangalore
|Ashy Prinia (Prinia socialis) nest- eggs in West Indian Elm (Guazuma ulmifolia) in Hyderabad, AP W IMG 7496.jpg|Nest with eggs, Hyderabad, India
|Prinia socialis -Pune, Maharashtra, India-8.jpg|In Pune, India
}}

References

1. ^{{IUCN|id=22713604 |title=Prinia socialis |assessor=BirdLife International |assessor-link=BirdLife International |version=2013.2 |year=2012 |accessdate=26 November 2013}}
2. ^{{cite journal|first1=Per |last1=Alström|author2= Ericson, Per G.P.|author3= Olsson, Urban |author4=Sundberg, Per|date=Feb 2006|title=Phylogeny and classiWcation of the avian superfamily Sylvioidea|journal=Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution |volume=38|pages=381–397|doi=10.1016/j.ympev.2005.05.015|pmid=16054402 |issue=2|issn=1055-7903}}
3. ^{{cite book|author1=Rasmussen, P. C. |author2=Anderton, J. |lastauthoramp=yes |year=2005|title=Birds of South Asia: The Ripley Guide.|publisher=Smithsonian Institution & Lynx Edicions|isbn=8487334679}}
4. ^{{cite journal|author=Uttangi, J. C.|year=1991|title= "Electric sparks" from Ashy Wren Warbler|journal=Newsletter for Birdwatchers |volume=31|issue=7&8|page=14}}
5. ^{{cite book|author=Dewar, Douglas|year=1908|title=Birds of the Plains|page=222}}
6. ^{{cite journal|author1=Hall, KSS |author2=Tullberg, BS |lastauthoramp=yes |year=2004|title=Phylogenetic analyses of the diversity of moult strategies in Sylviidae in relation to migration|journal=Evolutionary Ecology |volume=18|pages=85–105|url=http://www.nrm.se/download/18.3f4924f310cc9243845800020/evol.+ecol.+2004.pdf |format=PDF|doi=10.1023/B:EVEC.0000017848.20735.8b}}
7. ^{{cite book|author1=Ali, S. |author2=Ripley, S. D. |lastauthoramp=yes |title=Handbook of the Birds of India and Pakistan. Volume 8|pages=55–60|year=1997|edition=2nd|publisher=Oxford University Press|place=New Delhi}}
8. ^{{cite journal|author=Hemanth, J. |year=1990|title=On the roosting of the Ashy Wren-Warbler|journal=Newsletter for Birdwatchers |volume=30|issue=5&6|page=15 |url=https://archive.org/stream/NLBW30_56#page/n16/mode/1up/}}
9. ^{{cite journal|author=Ramanan, R. V. |year=1995|title= The nest of Ashy Wren Warbler Prinia socialis|journal=Newsletter for Birdwatchers |volume=35|issue=1|page=17|url=https://archive.org/stream/NLBW35_1#page/n18/mode/1up/}}
10. ^{{cite journal|author=Bhambral, R. |year=1966|title=Dog's hair used for nest by Ashy Wren Warblers|journal=Newsletter for Birdwatchers |volume=6|issue=8|page=7|url=https://archive.org/stream/NLBW6#page/n98/mode/1up/}}
11. ^{{cite book|author=Oates, E. W.|year=1905|title=Catalogue of the collection of birds' eggs in the British Museum.|publisher= British Museum}}
12. ^{{cite journal|author1=Chakravarthy, AK |author2=Subramanya, S |author3=Nagarajan, S |year=1980|title= The nesting of the Ashy Wren-Warbler Prinia socialis, Sykes in Bangalore|journal=Newsletter for Birdwatchers |volume=20|issue=4|pages=8–9|url=https://archive.org/stream/NLBW30_12#page/n5/mode/1up}}
13. ^{{cite book|author=George, J. C.|year=1962|title= Nest-shifting behaviour of the Ashy Wren-Warbler|journal=The Auk |volume=78|issue=3|pages=435–6|url=http://sora.unm.edu/sites/default/files/journals/auk/v078n03/p0435-p0436.pdf |format=PDF}}
14. ^{{cite book|author=Karthikeyan, S |year=1993|chapter= Monogamy in Ashywren Warbler Prinia socialis: How much do sexes share domestic duties|title=Bird Conservation: Strategies for the Nineties and Beyond|url=https://archive.org/stream/BirdConservationStrategies/BirdConservationIndia#page/n227/mode/1up/|editor1=Verghese, A |editor2=Sridhar, S |editor3=Chakravarthy, AK |publisher=Ornithological Society of India, Bangalore|pages=200–201}}
15. ^{{cite journal|author=Wesley, H. D. |year=1994|title= Nest-temperature regulation during incubation in Ashy Wren-Warbler|journal=Newsletter for Birdwatchers |volume=34|issue=2|pages=29–31|url=https://archive.org/stream/NLBW34_2#page/n10/mode/1up/}}
16. ^{{cite book|author= Desai, R. N. |year=1993|chapter= Atmospheric temperature and the incubation pattern in the Ashy Wren-Warbler Prinia socialis|title= Bird Conservation: Strategies for the Nineties and Beyond|editor=Verghese, A|editor2=Sridhar, S|editor3=Chakravarthy, AK|publisher= Ornithological Society of India|place= Bangalore|page=176|url=https://archive.org/stream/BirdConservationStrategies/BirdConservationIndia#page/n203/mode/1up/}}
17. ^{{cite book|author=Lowther, Peter E. |year=2007|title= Host list of Avian brood parasites – 2.|publisher=Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago|url=http://fm1.fmnh.org/aa/Files/lowther/OWcList.pdf|format=PDF}}

Other sources

  • Balachandran, S; Rosalind, Lima (1992) [https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/48732857 Southern Ashy Wren-Warbler Prinia socialis socialis Sykes in Pt. Calimere Wildlife Sanctuary, Tamil Nadu.] J. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc. 89(3):377.
  • Jairamdas, Arjun (1977) Three nests of Ashy Wren Warbler – diary of one season. Newsletter for Birdwatchers . 17(2):4–6.
  • Subramanya, S.; Veeresh, G. K. (1998) Nesting of two insectivorous birds in the rice fields of Bangalore. Chap. 4. In: Birds in Agricultural Ecosystem. (Eds: Dhindsa, MS; Rao, P Syamsunder; Parasharya, BM) Society for Applied Ornithology, Hyderabad, 10–17.
  • Ajmeri, R. M.; Das, A. R. K.; Sasikumar, M. (1961) An unusual nest of the Ashy Wren-warbler (Prinia socialis). Newsletter for Birdwatchers . 1(4):1.

External links

{{Commons category|Prinia socialis}}
  • Internet Bird Collection
{{Taxonbar|from=Q1590952}}{{DEFAULTSORT:prinia, ashy}}

3 : Prinia|Birds of South Asia|Birds described in 1832

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