Cisticola

Genus of birds From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cisticola is a genus of small insectivorous birds formerly classified in the Old World warbler family Sylviidae, but now usually considered to be in the separate family Cisticolidae, along with other tropical and southern warbler genera. The name is used as both the scientific and vernacular names; it can be pronounced either kis-ti-cola (classical Latin) or sis-tic-ola (ecclesiastical Latin). Genetic data suggests the family is quite closely related to the swallows and martins, the bulbuls, and the white-eyes. The genus contains over 50 species, of which only two are not found in Africa, one in Madagascar and the other from Asia to Australasia. They are also sometimes called fan-tailed warblers due to their habit of conspicuously flicking their tails, or tailor-birds because of their nests.

Phylum:Chordata
Class:Aves
Quick facts Scientific classification, Type species ...
Cisticola
Zitting cisticola (Cisticola juncidis cisticola)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Cisticolidae
Genus: Cisticola
Kaup, 1829
Type species
Sylvia cisticola = Cisticola juncidis cisticola
Temminck, 1820[1]
Species

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Taxonomy

The genus was described by the German naturalist Johann Jakob Kaup in 1829. The type species, Sylvia cisticola by tautonymy, is now treated as a subspecies of Cisticola juncidis.[2][3] The name Cisticola is from Ancient Greek κίσθος kisthos or κίστος kistos, "rock-rose (Cistus)", and Latin colere, "to dwell".[4]

Range and habitat

Cisticolas are widespread through the tropical and subtropical regions of the Old World. Africa, which is home to almost all of the species, is the most likely ancestral home of the group. Cisticolas are usually non-migratory with most species attached to (and often distinguishable by) their habitats.

A variety of open habitats are occupied. These include wetlands, moist or drier grasslands, open or rocky mountain slopes, and human-modified habitats such as road verges, cultivation, weedy areas or pasture. The species preferring wetlands can be found at the edges of mangrove, or in papyrus, common reed, or typha swamps. Cisticolas are generally quite common within what remains of their preferred habitats.

The zitting cisticola (or fan-tailed warbler) is widespread throughout the Old World tropics and also breeds in southern Europe. It has been spreading northwards in western Europe with the warming climate, and has occurred on a few occasions as a vagrant to England, with breeding recorded there for the first time in 2025.[5]

Description

Cisticolas are small (from 9–17 cm) and with brown plumage; they may be either streaked dark brown on lighter brown above, or more plainly uniform brown above. The underparts are paler, usually whitish or buff. The tails are distinctively short in several species. Because of their small size and often skulking, they are generally more easily heard than seen, except when singing in flight. Several have more brightly coloured crowns, orange-brown to golden, to (rarely) white. The similar plumage of many species can make them hard to identify, particularly in winter when they seldom emerge from the vegetation. Many African species, in particular, are difficult to distinguish other than by their calls. Fourteen species are named from their calls or songs, from "singing" and "chirping" to "bubbling", "croaking", "rattling", "siffling", "tinkling", "trilling", "wailing", and "zitting".[6][7] The sexes are largely alike in plumage or with small differences mainly in the bill colour and amount of streaking on the head, but many show sexual dimorphism in size, with the males heavier than the females.[6]

The smallest is tiny cisticola at 9–10 cm long and 5–10 g weight, the largest is croaking cisticola at 13–17 cm long and 12–29 g (male 16–29 g, female 12–18 g) weight.[7][6]

Behaviour

Male cisticolas are polygamous. The female builds a discreet nest deep in the grasses, often binding living leaves into the soft fabric of felted plant down, cobweb, and grass: a cup shape for the zitting cisticola with a canopy of tied-together leaves or grasses overhead for camouflage, a full dome for the golden-headed cisticola. The average clutch is about 4 eggs, which take about 2 weeks to hatch.

In summer, male cisticolas of smaller species make spectacular display flights while larger species perch in prominent places to sing lustily. Despite its size and well-camouflaged, brown-streaked plumage, the male golden-headed cisticola of Australia and southern Asia produces a small, brilliant splash of golden-yellow colour in the dappled sunlight of a reed bed.

The parasitic weaver is a specialist brood parasite of cisticolas and the related prinias.

List of species

The genus contains 53 species:[8]

More information Image, Common name ...
ImageCommon nameScientific nameDistribution
Red-faced cisticolaCisticola erythropsSub-Saharan Africa (except southern and Horn of Africa)
Singing cisticolaCisticola cantansSub-Saharan Africa
Whistling cisticolaCisticola lateralisAfrican tropical rainforest
Trilling cisticolaCisticola woosnamiZambia, Tanzania, DR Congo, western Kenya
Chattering cisticolaCisticola anonymuscentral Africa
Bubbling cisticolaCisticola bullienswestern Angola
Hunter's cisticolaCisticola hunteriKenya and northern Tanzania
Chubb's cisticolaCisticola chubbiWestern High Plateau and Albertine rift montane forests
-Kilombero cisticolaCisticola bakerorumTanzania
-Black-lored cisticolaCisticola nigrilorisTanzania
Rock-loving cisticolaCisticola aberransSub-Saharan Africa
-Huambo cisticolaCisticola bailunduensisAngola
Rattling cisticolaCisticola chinianaSub-Saharan Africa (except western and southern Africa)
-Boran cisticolaCisticola bodessaEritrea, Ethiopia and Kenya
Churring cisticolaCisticola njombeTanzania and northern Malawi
Ashy cisticolaCisticola cinereolusEast Africa
-Tana River cisticolaCisticola restrictusKenya
Tinkling cisticolaCisticola rufilatuscentral-southern Africa
Grey-backed cisticolaCisticola subruficapillaNamibia and South Africa
Wailing cisticolaCisticola laissouthern and eastern Afromontane
-Lynes's cisticolaCisticola distinctusKenya
Rufous-winged cisticolaCisticola galactotessoutheastern Africa
Winding cisticolaCisticola marginatusnorth/central Sub-Saharan Africa
-Coastal cisticolaCisticola haematocephaluscoastal East Africa
-White-tailed cisticolaCisticola anderseniTanzania
-Ethiopian cisticolaCisticola lugubrisEthiopia
Luapula cisticolaCisticola luapulaZambia and adjacent areas
Chirping cisticolaCisticola pipiensZambia, Angola and southern DR Congo
-Carruthers's cisticolaCisticola carruthersiRwenzori and northern Lake Victoria region
Levaillant's cisticolaCisticola tinnienssouthern Sub-Saharan Africa
Stout cisticolaCisticola robustuswestern and eastern Afromontane
Aberdare cisticolaCisticola aberdareKenya
Croaking cisticolaCisticola natalensisSub-Saharan Africa
Red-pate cisticolaCisticola ruficepsLake Chad to Eritrea and northern Uganda
Dorst's cisticolaCisticola guineawestern Africa
Tiny cisticolaCisticola nanaEast Africa
-Short-winged cisticolaCisticola brachypterusSub-Saharan Africa (except southern Africa)
-Rufous cisticolaCisticola rufuswestern Africa
Foxy cisticolaCisticola troglodyteswestern CAR to Ethiopia
NeddickyCisticola fulvicapillasouthern half of Sub-Saharan Africa
Long-tailed cisticolaCisticola angusticaudaZambia and Tanzania
Black-tailed cisticolaCisticola melanurusnorthern Angola and south-western DRC
Zitting cisticolaCisticola juncidisAfrotropics, southern Palearctic and northern Australia
Socotra cisticolaCisticola haesitatusSocotra
Madagascar cisticolaCisticola cherinaSeychelles and Madagascar
Desert cisticolaCisticola aridulusArid regions of Sub-Saharan Africa
Cloud cisticolaCisticola textrixAngola, western Zambia and southern Africa
Black-backed cisticolaCisticola eximiussparsely present across the Sudan (region), the Congo and western Kenya
Dambo cisticolaCisticola dambothe Congo, southern DRC, northern Angola and Zambia
Pectoral-patch cisticolaCisticola brunnescensAdamawa Massif, Gabon, the Congo and highlands of East Africa
Pale-crowned cisticolaCisticola cinnamomeusthe Congo, Tanzania to eastern South Africa
Wing-snapping cisticolaCisticola ayresiihighlands of southern Africa
Golden-headed cisticolaCisticola exilisIndomalaya and western Oceania
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References

Further reading

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