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Marsh Warbler

 
Animal Encyclopedia: Marsh warbler

Acrocephalus palustris

SUBFAMILY

Sylviinae

TAXONOMY

Acrocephalus palustris Bechstein, 1798.

OTHER COMMON NAMES

French: Rousserolle verderolle; German: Sumpfrohrsänger; Spanish: Carricero Poliglota.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

5.1 in (13 cm); 0.4–0.7 oz (10–20 g). Heavy, medium-sized warbler with uniform olive-brown upperparts, creamy under-parts, buffy wash on sides of breast and flanks, white throat, and light line from eye to base of bill.

DISTRIBUTION

Breeds throughout Central and Western Europe, excluding Iberia and British Isles to southern Scandinavia and western Russia. Winters in Southeast Africa.

HABITAT

Breeds in tall herbaceous vegetation and woody cover, often in moist areas, but also on dry slopes, and in parks and open forest.

BEHAVIOR

Solitary and territorial in breeding season, some males polyterritorial. Posture somewhat upright. Song a complex, sweet warble learned by mimicry of other birds. Female sings during courtship.

FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET

Gleans insects and spiders from low vegetation. Also takes snails, and rarely berries.

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY

Mostly monogamous, but serial monogamy and opportunistic polygyny occur. Courtship may include aerial dance involving both sexes. Nest is built by female; cylindrical cup of leaves and plant material 3.3–6.6 ft (1–2 m) from ground in tall vegetation, with rim woven around supporting vegetation. Three to six eggs incubated and young, cared for by both parents, leave nest after 11–12 days, remain dependent 15–19 days.

CONSERVATION STATUS

Not threatened.

SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS

None known.

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Wikipedia: Marsh Warbler
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Marsh Warbler
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Sylviidae
Genus: Acrocephalus
Species: A. palustris
Binomial name
Acrocephalus palustris
(Bechstein, 1798)

The Marsh Warbler, Acrocephalus palustris, is an Old World warbler in the genus Acrocephalus. It breeds in temperate Europe and western Asia. It is migratory, wintering in south east Africa. It does not breed in the Iberian peninsula, and in England it is scarce and declining, with the former main centre of population in Worcestershire now extinct.

Today, in Kent, the former area of St Margaret's Bay that at its best peak held 17 pairs in 1993 is now deserted due to the activities of eggers and has been so since 2003, but birds persist on a private SSSI site in Sandwich Bay and possibly elsewhere in the Stour Catchment. In Essex, the bird is on the increase, breeding along the Thames corridor on brownfield, former industrial sites and also neighboring SSSIs and nature reserves; this nucleus of birds is found mostly in Eastern boroughs in the vicinity of Barking, Dagenham Dock, Rainham and the Ingrebourne Valley although exact sites are necessarily withheld. A handful of pairs breed in Norfolk and may still persist in Sussex, with further sporadic breeding in Yorkshire (2008), Tynside and SE Scotland.

This small passerine bird is a species found in fairly tall rank vegetation in marshes or by rivers. 3-6 eggs are laid in a nest in reeds or low vegetation. This species is usually monogamous (Leisler & Wink 2000). In breeding habitat in SE England today, it shows a strong preference for rank herbaceous vegetation in proximity to taller bushes and at two current breeding sites, favours rich wasteland with a profusion of rosebay willowherb, cow parsley and nettle.

This is a medium-sized warbler. The adult has a plain brown back and pale underparts. It can be confused with the Reed Warbler, but is greyer on the back, the forehead is less flattened and the bill is less strong and pointed. The sexes are identical, as with most warblers, but young birds are yellower below.

The habitat is different from the reed beds favoured by the Reed Warbler. Like most warblers, the Marsh Warbler is insectivorous, but will take other small food items including berries.

In the breeding season, the best identification feature is the song, which is high and fast, and consists almost entirely of mimicry of other birds, punctuated with typically acrocephaline sqeaks and whistles. Dozens of different European and African bird calls have been identified in the song of this warbler.

Contents

Conservation

The reasons for the population decline of this species are not completely understood, but the fragmentation of habitat has been discussed in UK official documents of it Biodiversity Action Plan, a national program for protection of this declining species. Fragmentation is a generic term usually associated with land develoment patterns of an expanding human population. It is notable, however, that in continental Europe at least, the species in known to have a short breeding season (52-55 days: Leisler & Wink 2000) making it more vulnerable to climate change.

References

  • Leisler, B. & Wink, Michael (2000): Frequencies of multiple paternity in three Acrocephalus species (Aves: Sylviidae) with different mating systems (A. palustris, A. arundinaceus, A. paludicola). Ethology, Ecology & Evolution 12: 237-249. PDF fulltext

Further reading

Identification

Marsh Warbler with a cuckoo nestling.

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Animal Encyclopedia. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Marsh Warbler" Read more