White-bellied go-away bird (Yathin S
Krishnappa/Wikipedia)
Go-away birds – they sound like something from a
children's fantasy novel, akin perhaps to the Never bird in J.M. Barrie's
classic Peter Pan. And yet they are indisputably – and very audibly –
real. Ask any native African hunter attempting to sneak up on his intended
animal victim when one or more of these birds is perched close by.
They earn their onomatopoeic name from the sound of
their extremely loud, oft-repeated cry, which does sound rather like "g-away!"
– check out this YouTube video here
of some grey go-away birds in fine voice, and listen for yourself.
Grey go-away bird (Claude Gibney
Finch-Davies, 1916)
Acting very much as self-appointed wildlife
sentinels, go-away birds perch high up in tree tops, well out of danger
themselves, and then proceed via their raucous alarm cries to warn any
unsuspecting antelope or any other prey animal in the vicinity of approaching
threats, such as human hunters, lions, cheetahs, and other predators. As a
result, both prey and predator do indeed go away – the grateful prey to live
another day, the seriously aggrieved predators to glare with impotent rage at
their feathered nemeses.
But what are go-away birds, zoologically
speaking? In fact, they are unusually plain-plumaged relatives of the typically
gaudy touracos (and less gaudy plantain-eaters). Touracos are famous for their
controversial classification – sometimes allied with the cuckoos, sometimes
accorded their very own taxonomic order, Musophagiformes. And they are equally
celebrated for producing not one but two porphyrin-derived pigments found
nowhere else in the animal kingdom – turacin and turacoverdin.
Johnston's touraco Ruwenzorornis
johnstoni (J.G. Keulemans, 1902)
Turacin is the bright crimson pigment commonly seen
edging their wings (in all other birds, red colouration is due to the presence
of carotenoids); and as its name indicates, turacoverdin is a green pigment
that is liberally exhibited in touraco plumage (but in all other birds, green
colouration is due to a combination of yellow carotenoids and the scattering of
blue light caused by the prismatic qualities of their feathers' surface
structure).
Red-crested touraco Tauraco
erythrolophus, 1838 painting
In stark contrast, go-away bird are garbed only in
the most sombre, nondescript greys and whites, but possess showy crests and
long tails, and average 20 inches or so in total length. Like typical touracos,
they are endemic to tropical Africa, gregarious, non-migratory, and live
principally upon fruit and flowers,. However, they inhabit open or less
forested country, whereas other touracos tend to be predominantly forest
dwellers.
White-bellied go-away bird (Steve
Garvie/Wikipedia)
Three species are recognised. The most attractive
member of this trio is the white-bellied go-away bird Corythaixoides
leucogaster. Very widely distributed in East Africa, it boasts a lengthy
tail handsomely barred in black and white, and bright white underparts too.
Grey go-away birds (Axel
Bührmann/Wikipedia)
Less dramatic is the aptly-named grey go-away bird C.
concolor. Native to much of southern and southeastern Africa (and often
visiting suburban gardens and parks), it is indeed predominantly ashen in
colour.
Bare-faced go-away bird (Lip Kee
Yap/Wikipedia)
So too is the bare-faced or masked go-away bird C.
personatus, but as its name suggests, its facial skin is bereft of feathers
and is black in colour, yielding a mask-like appearance that contrasts sharply
with its grey crest and the white plumes borne upon the remainder of its face
and neck. This species has two discrete populations – one covering much of
Tanzania, Rwanda, and Burundi as well as stretching into the peripheries of
Kenya, Uganda, Zambia, Malawi, and the Democratic Congo, but the other confined
entirely to Ethiopia.
Bare-faced go-away bird (Joseph Smit,
1881)
Happily,
none of these three go-away bird species is endangered – much to the chagrin,
no doubt, of the hunters all-too-frequently frustrated by their noisy
scare-mongering!
Grey go-away bird (Hans
Stieglitz/Wikipedia)
Click here
for an informative YouTube video featuring a hand-reared white-bellied go-away
bird named Mr McBouncyPants at Houston Zoo.
Bare-faced go-away bird (Brooke Bond
PG Tips 'Incredible Creatures' collector card, 1986 / inclusion here strictly on Fair Use/non-commercial basis only)
Now that… is weird.
ReplyDeleteI love weirdness! Thanks for giving us weirdness in your wonderful blog, Dr. Shuker!
I try my best! lol - glad you enjoyed it.
ReplyDelete