Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Alpine accentor

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Kingdom
  
Order
  
Passeriformes

Infraorder
  
Passerida

Scientific name
  
Prunella collaris

Rank
  
Species

Phylum
  
Chordata

Suborder
  
Passeri

Superfamily
  
Passeroidea

Higher classification
  
Accentor

Alpine accentor Alpine accentor Wikipedia

Similar
  
Bird, Common rock thrush, Wallcreeper, Accentor, Eurasian crag martin

Alpenbraunelle mit gesang alpine accentor singing prunella collaris


The alpine accentor (Prunella collaris) is a small passerine bird.

Contents

Alpine accentor mallos de riglos 29th february 2016


Taxonomy and etymology

Alpine accentor Alpine Accentors Prunella collaris in Tirol

The word "accentor" is from post-classical Latin and means a person who sings with another. The genus name Prunella is from the German Braunelle, "dunnock", a diminutive of braun, "brown", and the specific collaris is from Latin collum, "neck".

This species, along with the Altai accentor is sometimes separated from the other accentors, into the genus Laiscopus.

Description

Alpine accentor Alpine Accentor Prunella collaris videos photos and sound

This is a robin-sized bird at 15-17.5 cm in length, slightly larger than its relative, the dunnock. It has a streaked brown back, somewhat resembling a house sparrow, but adults have a grey head and red-brown spotting on the underparts. It has an insectivore's fine pointed bill.

Sexes are similar, although the male may be contrasted in appearance. Young birds have browner heads and underparts.

Distribution and habitat

Alpine accentor Surfbirds Online Photo Gallery Search Results

It is found throughout the mountains of southern temperate Europe, Lebanon and Asia at heights above 2000 m. It is mainly resident, wintering more widely at lower latitudes, but some birds wander as rare vagrants as far as Great Britain.

It is a bird of bare mountain areas with some low vegetation.

Breeding

It builds a neat nest low in a bush or rock crevice, laying 3-5 unspotted sky-blue eggs.

Alpine accentor httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The mating system is of particular interest. Home ranges are occupied by breeding groups of 3 or 4 males with 3 or 4 females. These are unrelated birds which have a socially polygynandrous mating system. Males have a dominance hierarchy, with the alpha males being generally older than subordinates. Females seek matings with all the males, although the alpha male may defend her against matings from lower ranking males. In turn, males seek matings with all the females. DNA fingerprinting has been used to show that, within broods, there is often mixed paternity, although the female is always the true mother of the nestlings raised within her nest. Males will provide food to chicks at several nests within the group, depending on whether they have mated with the female or not - males only provide care when they are likely to be the true fathers of the chicks.

Alpine accentor Discovering Alpine Birds The Alpine Accentor digiscoped

Alpine accentor Alpine accentor

References

Alpine accentor Wikipedia