Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Icterine warbler

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Passeriformes

Genus
  
Hippolais

Higher classification
  
Hippolais

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Acrocephalidae

Scientific name
  
Hippolais icterina

Rank
  
Species

Icterine warbler wwwnaturephotoczcomphotosbirdsicterinewarbl

Similar
  
Bird, Marsh warbler, Garden warbler, Wood warbler, Common whitethroat

Icterine warbler song


The icterine warbler (Hippolais icterina) is an Old World warbler in the tree warbler genus Hippolais. It breeds in mainland Europe except the southwest, where it is replaced by its western counterpart, melodious warbler. It is migratory, wintering in sub-Saharan Africa.

Contents

Icterine warbler Icterine Warbler Hippolais icterina Icterine Warblers ar Flickr

Icterine warbler


Description

Icterine warbler Icterine warbler Wikipedia

A fairly big warbler with a large head, broad based bill and long wings with a quite short square ended tail. The upperparts are greyish-green and the underparts are unifrmly light yellow. It has pale lores and a rather vague yellowish supercilium with a pale eye ring. Other distinguishing features include a panel on the folded wings formed by pale edges to the secondary feathers and tertiary feathers and the grey, sometimes bluish legs.

Habitat

Icterine warbler Icterine Warbler song call voice sound

The icterine warbler is a bird of woodland rather than forest, preferring woodland edge or glades, favouring the crowns of well spaced trees with tall undergrowth. Prefers broad leafed trees, but may be found in conifers mixed with broad leafed trees. Will use copses, orchards, parks , gardens, shelterbelts and tall hedges interspersed with trees.

Voice

The song is a fast nasal babbling incorporating mimicry of other species. The call is described as teck or tec, tec, tec.

Distribution and movements

The icterine warbler has the most northerly and widespread distribution of the four Hippolais species, its breeding range extends from northern France and Norway through most of northern and eastern Europe, south as far as the northern Balkans mountains and Crimea mountains eastwards in a narrowing band to the River Ob. It has bred in Scotland recently but it is normally a passage migrant in Great Britain and Ireland

It is a migratory species and the entire population winters in sub-Saharan Africa, mainly south of the equator. It begins its southward migration from late July, peaking in early August and returns to the breeding range in late May.

Biology

The icterine warbler is mainly insectivorous but will feed on fruit in late summer. It forages amomng the foliage taking insects either on the leaves or fluttering, will flycatch. In general it is clumsier than the smaller but superficially similar Phylloscopus warblers. Rather solitary and it is territorial on both the breeding and wintering grounds. Four to six eggs are laid in a nest in a tree or a bush.

Etymology

The genus name Hippolais is from Ancient Greek hupolais, as misspelt by Linnaeus. It referred to a small bird mentioned by Aristotle and others and may be onomatopoeic or derived from hupo,"under", and laas, "stone". The specific icterina is Greek for "jaundice-yellow". Icterus was an old word for jaundice, and also referred to a yellowish-green bird, perhaps the golden oriole, the sight of which was believed to cure the disease. It is colloquially referred to by birders as icky.

References

Icterine warbler Wikipedia