Crag Martin
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Crag Martin | ||||||||||||||
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Ptyonoprogne rupestris (Scopoli, 1769) |
The Crag Martin, Ptyonoprogne rupestris, is a small passerine bird in the swallow family. It breeds in the mountains of southern Europe, the Mediterranean and south Asia. Many European birds are resident, but some northern breeders and most Asian birds are migratory. They winter in north Africa or India.
The Crag Martin is 14-15 cm long and somewhat similar in habits and appearance to the other aerial insectivores, such as the related swallows and the unrelated swifts. It has brown upperparts and dusky underparts, and shows white "windows" on the spread tail in flight.
It resembles the Sand Martin, but is larger, darker below, and lacks a breast band. Its flight is fast and agile, and it swoops on the insects on which it feeds while airborne. It has broad pointed wings.
The Crag Martin builds a neat quarter-sphere nest lined with mud collected in its beaks, and lays 3-5 eggs. It normally nests under cliff overhangs in its mountain homes, but will readily adapt to buildings and motorway bridges. It does not normally form large breeding colonies, but is gregarious outside the breeding season.
[edit] Taxonomic note
The genus Ptyonoprogne is often subsumed into the larger swallow genus Hirundo.
[edit] References
- Turner, Angela K; Rose, Chris (1989). A handbook to the swallows and martins of the world. Christopher Helm. ISBN 0-7470-3202-5.