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Animal Database
Animal Database
Double-banded Courser
152661617.1pfQvayu.006Corrion ca8578
Information
Common Name Two-banded Courser
Range Ethiopia, Somalia, South Africa, Tanzania.
Scientific Classification
Kingdom Animalia
Phylum Chordata
Class Aves
Order Charadriiformes
Family Glareolidae
Genus Smutsornis
Species Smutsornis africanus
Conservation Status
LCSpecies
Least Concern

The Double-banded courser (Smutsornis africanus), also known as the two-banded courser, is a species of wader in the Glareolidae family. It is the only member of the genus Smutsornis.

Description[]

The bird's crown is pale and streaked with brown/black feathers. A narrow black stripe extends from the base of the bill, through the eye to the nape. The cheeks, chin, throat and neck are buff/white flecked with dark brown. The feather of the back and wing coverts are sandy brown with dark centres and broadly edged with white/buff. The short bill is blackish, eyes are dark brown and the legs and feet are pale grey.

Distribution and Habitat[]

The double-banded courser is found in Ethiopia, Somalia, South Africa, Tanzania. The bird is widespread enough to have practically no chance of becoming endangered or extinct. The double-banded courser lives and breeds in flat, stony or gravelly, semi-desert terrains with firm, sandy soil and tufty grass or thorn scrub.

Behavior[]

Breeding[]

Double-banded coursers breed in monogamous pairs. Breeding begins after a mating dance where the male dances in semicircles around the female. The female then lays one egg, which the parents take hour-long shifts incubating. After about twenty-five days, the egg hatches. The chicks leave the nest within 24 hours of hatching, although staying close to the nest until 3–4 days old, at which point it joins its parents. Both adults feed the chick with small insects until it becomes self-providing at about 5–6 weeks old.

The breeding season varies by country:

Ethiopia - April–June; Somalia - February–July (mainly May–June); Tanzania - November; South Africa - all year, peaking in October–November.

Feeding[]

The bird eats mostly insects, such as ants, termites, and beetles. It catches its prey by quickly running after it and jabbing with its bill.

Subspecies[]

There are eight subspecies of Smutsornis africanus:

Image
Name
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Smutsornis africanus africanus

(Temminck, 1807)

eastern Namibia, central & southeast Botswana & northern South Africa
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Smutsornis africanus bisignatus

(Hartlaub, 1865)

southwest Angola
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Smutsornis africanus erlangeri

(Fischer & Niethammer & Wolters, 1966)

northwest Namibia
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Smutsornis africanus gracilis

(Fischer & Reichenow, 1884)

Kenya & Tanzania
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Smutsornis africanus granti

(Fischer & Sclater, 1921)

western South Africa
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Smutsornis africanus hartingi

(Fischer & Sharpe, 1893)

southeast Ethiopia, Somalia
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Smutsornis africanus raffertyi

(Fischer & Mearns, 1915)

eastern Ethiopia & Djibouti
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Smutsornis africanus traylori

(Irwin, 1963)

northeast Botswana