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Black-backed Puffback (Dryoscopus cubla)

Black-backed Puffback (Dryoscopus cubla) - Female
Black-backed Puffback (Dryoscopus cubla) - Female

About Black-backed Puffback (Dryoscopus cubla)

  • Kingdom: Animals
  • Phylum: Chordates
  • Class: Birds
  • Order: Perching Birds
  • Family: Jays and Crows

The black-backed puffback is a species of passerine bird in the family Malaconotidae. They are common to fairly common sedentary bushshrikes in various wooded habitats in Africa south of the equator. They restlessly move about singly, in pairs or family groups, and generally frequent tree canopies. Like others of its genus, the males puff out the loose rump and lower back feathers in display, to assume a remarkable ball-like appearance. They draw attention to themselves by their varied repertoire of whistling, clicking and rasping sounds. Their specific name cubla, originated with Francois Levaillant, who derived it from a native southern African name, where the "c" is an onomatopoeic click sound. None of the other five puffback species occur in southern Africa.

Lifelists

Visits

  • 2013-10-24
    Nairobi National Park, Kenya
    Image from 2013-10-24
  • 2025-01-27
    Arusha National Park, Tanzania
  • 2025-01-28
    Arusha National Park, Tanzania
    Image from 2025-01-28
  • 2025-01-29
    Arusha National Park, Tanzania
  • 2025-02-01
    Mkomazi National Park, Tanzania
  • 2025-02-02
    South Pare Mountains, Tanzania