All Species Animalia

Caprimulgus vexillarius (Gould, 1838) is a animal in the Caprimulgidae family, order Caprimulgiformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Caprimulgus vexillarius (Gould, 1838) (Caprimulgus vexillarius (Gould, 1838))
Animalia

Caprimulgus vexillarius (Gould, 1838)

Caprimulgus vexillarius (Gould, 1838)

Caprimulgus vexillarius, the pennant-winged nightjar, is a migratory nightjar species with characteristic male breeding plumage.

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Family
Genus
Caprimulgus
Order
Caprimulgiformes
Class
Aves

About Caprimulgus vexillarius (Gould, 1838)

Male Wing Identification Marking

The male Pennant-winged nightjar, Caprimulgus vexillarius, can be recognized by a distinct broad white band that crosses its otherwise black primary wing feathers.

Breeding Season Pennant Feather Growth

During the breeding season, males grow a striking second primary feather known as a pennant feather. These pennant feathers increase in length as males age, eventually reaching up to twice the length of the bird’s entire body.

Post-Breeding Pennant Feather Loss

After breeding finishes, the pennant feathers are quickly shed or broken off.

Male Wing Shape Characteristics

Male wings have a distinctly angular shape, because the 9th distal primary and the 1st through 3rd proximal primaries are the longest feathers on the wing.

Southern Hemisphere Habitat Preference

South of the equator, this species prefers to live in plateau woodlands, particularly Miombo woodland, and favors stony or boulder-strewn hillsides within these habitats.

Migrant Sighting Range

Caprimulgus vexillarius is a social, bi-annual passage migrant that is regularly seen in Kenya’s Rift Valley and Lake Victoria regions.

Non-Breeding Habitat Range

The species spends its non-breeding season in subtropical savanna habitat, across an area extending from Nigeria to Sudan.

Photo: (c) Laura Keene, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Laura Keene · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Caprimulgiformes Caprimulgidae Caprimulgus

More from Caprimulgidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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