Apus Caffer
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The white-rumped swift (''Apus caffer'') is a species of swift. Although this small bird is superficially similar to a house martin, it is not closely related to that passerine species. The resemblances between the
swallows The swallows, martins, and saw-wings, or Hirundinidae, are a family of passerine songbirds found around the world on all continents, including occasionally in Antarctica. Highly adapted to aerial feeding, they have a distinctive appearance. The ...
and swifts are due to convergent evolution reflecting similar life styles.


Description

This 14–15.5 cm long species has, like some relatives, a short forked tail and long swept-back wings that resemble a crescent or a boomerang. It is entirely dark except for a pale throat patch and a narrow white rump. It is similar to the closely related little swift, but is slimmer, darker and has a more forked tail and a narrower white rump.


Call

This is a quiet species compared to little swift, but a twittering trill is sometimes given.


Habits

Like other swifts they have very short legs that they use only for clinging to vertical surfaces. They never settle voluntarily on the ground, and spend most of their lives in the air, feeding on insects that they catch in their beaks. Like other swifts they drink on the wing.


Habitat

The habitat of this species is dictated by that of its hosts, and is therefore normally man-made structures such as bridges and buildings.


Breeding range

White-rumped swifts breed in much of sub-Saharan Africa, and have expanded into Morocco and southern Spain. The populations in Spain, Morocco and the south of Africa are migratory, although their wintering grounds are not definitively known. Birds in tropical Africa are resident apart from seasonal movements.


Breeding

This species appropriates the nests of little swifts and those swallows which build retort-shaped nests. In Europe and north Africa, this usually means the red-rumped swallow, but south of the Sahara other species like wire-tailed swallow are also parasitised. The original owners of the nests are driven away, or the white-rumps settle in the nest and refuse to move. Once occupied, the nest is lined with feathers and saliva, and one or two eggs are laid.


Gallery

White-rumped Swift (Apus caffer) (6041288566).jpg, White-rumped swift, Apus caffer, at Suikerbosrand Nature Reserve, Gauteng, South Africa (23057155930), crop.jpg Swift White-rumped 2015 12 18 07 27 23 1682, crop.jpg White-rumped swift, Apus caffer, at Suikerbosrand Nature Reserve, Gauteng, South Africa (22724578894).jpg White-rumped swift, Apus caffer, at Suikerbosrand Nature Reserve, Gauteng, South Africa (23244631962), crop.jpg White-rumped swift, Apus caffer, at Suikerbosrand Nature Reserve, Gauteng, South Africa (23326865516), crop.jpg


References


External links

* White-rumped swift
Species text in The Atlas of Southern African Birds
{{Taxonbar, from=Q179356 white-rumped swift Birds of Europe Birds of North Africa Birds of Sub-Saharan Africa white-rumped swift