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Short legged ground roller

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Species

Family
  
Brachypteraciidae

Higher classification
  
Brachypteracias

Order
  
Coraciiformes

Short-legged ground roller wwwtaenoscomimgITISBrachypteraciasleptosomus

Genus
  
Brachypteracias Lafresnaye, 1834

Scientific name
  
Brachypteracias leptosomus

Similar
  
Ground roller, Bird, Scaly ground roller, Pitta‑like ground roller, Rufous‑headed ground roller

Short legged ground roller


The short-legged ground roller (Brachypteracias leptosomus) is a species of bird in the ground roller family Brachypteraciidae. It is the only living species in the genus Brachypteracias and is endemic to Madagascar. It is threatened by habitat loss.

Contents

Taxonomy and systematics

The short-legged ground roller is the only extant species in the genus Brachypteracias, although a fossil species, Brachypteracias langrandi, has been described. The short-legged ground roller is more arboreal than other ground rollers, and may represent the ancestral form of the family. The genus Brachypteracias once included the scaly ground roller, but a 2001 study of the DNA of the family found that the two are not closely related. The same study found that the short-legged ground roller is basal in the family.

The genus name is derived from the Ancient Greek brakhupteros for short-winged. The species name leptosomus is also Greek and derived from leptos for delicate and sōmatos for body.

Distribution and habitat

The short-legged ground roller is endemic to Madagascar, where is occurs in the northern part of the island through the eastern coast to the southern end of the island. Its natural habitat is humid tropical moist lowland forests, from sea-level to 1,500 m (4,900 ft), although it is commoner at lower altitudes. It is almost exclusively found in mature closed forest with large trees but can also be found on slopes with numerous saplings, and is rare in disturbed forest.

Description

The short-legged ground roller has a large head and bill, a puffy throat. It is the largest forest ground roller, and is stouter than the other species (except for the scaly ground roller). It measures 30 to 38 cm (12–15 in) in length and weighs 154–217 g (5.4–7.7 oz). Where sexed individuals have been weighed the males were heavier, but the sample size was small. Females are smaller in other body measurements, for example wing chord length, which is 138 to 143 mm (5.4–5.6 in) in females compared to 140 to 152 mm (5.5–6.0 in) in males. As the name suggests the legs are short for the family, but contrary to its generic name the wings are the longest in the family, making this the most arboreal species, but is still not a strong flier.

Like the other members of the family, the plumage is cryptic.

Behaviour

The short-legged ground roller is a secretive species that has been little studied. Everything that is known about the behaviour of the species has come from a single systematic study of a single pair in Masoala National Park and from incidental observations of other birds.

Status and conservation

The short-legged ground roller is considered to be fairly common in its natural habitat. Nevertheless it is considered to be threatened with extinction due to the rapid loss of its habitat to slash and burn for subsistence agriculture. Its habitat is also considered to be threatened by climate change. Modelling of habitat change due to climate change predicts that the species may lose up to 62% of its current habitat. The species is also hunted.

References

Short-legged ground roller Wikipedia