Short Communication

Blackchested Prinia Prinia flavicans in Breeding Plumage at Satara, Kruger National Park

H. Roome
Koedoe | Vol 31, No 1 | a496 | DOI: https://doi.org/10.4102/koedoe.v31i1.496 | © 1988 H. Roome | This work is licensed under CC Attribution 4.0
Submitted: 21 October 1988 | Published: 21 October 1988

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H. Roome,, South Africa

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Abstract

On 8 October 1986 a pair of Blackchested Prinia Prinia flavicans in breeding plumage was observed in the camping area of Satara Rest Camp, Kruger National Park. Playing and replaying a tape recording of the call of a Pearlspotted Owl Glaucidium perlatum, in order to see what avian activity would be aroused, the recording attracted Blackeyed Bulbul Pycnonotus barbatus, Whitebellied Sunbird Nectarinia talatala and Tawnyflanked Prinia Prinia subflava, in addition to the pair of Blackchested Prinia, all highly excited and in search of the intruding Pearlspotted Owl. The birds homed in on the source of the call and all species were observed from a distance of some 2 m-3 m. Although recorded previously from the Kruger National Park (Newman 1980, Birds of Southern Africa 1: Kruger National Park, Johannesburg: Macmillan) in non-breeding plumage and also referred to by Milstein & Milstein (1981, Koedoe 24: 109-117) as a species which they probably observed near Punda Milia (in winter plumage), the Blackchested Prinia recorded at Satara were most obliging and it was possible to positively identify the presence of this species in the Kruger National Park in its breeding plumage.

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Crossref Citations

1. VERTEBRATE POPULATIONS AS INDICATORS OF ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE IN SOUTHERN AFRICA
I. A. W. Macdonald
Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa  vol: 48  issue: 1  first page: 87  year: 1992  
doi: 10.1080/00359199209520257