Buff-sided Robin

Buff-sided Robin
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Petroicidae
Genus: Poecilodryas
Species: P. cerviniventris
Binomial name
Poecilodryas cerviniventris
(Gould, 1858)
Synonyms
  • Poecilodryas superciliosa cerviniventris

The Buff-sided Robin (Poecilodryas cerviniventris) is a small bird in the Petroicidae family. It is endemic to northern Australia.

Contents

Description

The Robin has a green to brown back with a dark brown tail and wings streaked with white, creamy white chest, with pale orange around and beneath the wings. It is distinguished from the similar White-browed Robin, which it was formerly lumped, by its larger size, thicker and longer white superciliary stripe, duskier upper back, broad black face band, broader white remigial bar, rich tawny-rufous flanks, and white tipping on all retrices.[1]

Distribution and habitat

The Robin is found in the Kimberley region of north-west Western Australia and in the Top End of the Northern territory, where it inhabits woodlands and rainforest.

Breeding

Th Robin breeds from August to March. The two greenish-blue eggs, spotted with chestnut or purple, are laid in a small nest, made of twigs with paperbark and lichen, 1-10 m high in a tree.

Notes

  1. ^ Schodde & Mason, p.354.

References