ML201854321 IBC 1490183
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Poznámky
Southern Ground Hornbill female discarding wood excavated from her nest hollow. The Southern Ground Hornbill (Bucorvus leadbeateri) is a threatened, turkey-sized, mainly terrestrial hornbill found in southern and parts of East Africa. Ground Hornbills stay in small family groups and move like undertakers through the bush scanning the ground for prey such as snakes, lizards, amphibians, large insects and even tortoises, then catching them with their formidable black beaks. This family group comprised one male, one immature, and two females. Adult birds have bright red facial skin; females are smaller than males and have a blue skin patch on their throats; juveniles have yellow-orange facial skin. The Hornbills were perched together in an ancient Sycamore Fig on the bank of the N’wanetsi River in Kruger Park that contained a large hollow in the trunk. Both females investigated the potential nest hollow, and one began excavating rotten wood from it. While this was happening, the male perched above the hollow calling occasionally with one or both of the females responding antiphonally. Elevation: 287 m. Date added to IBC: May 4, 2018.
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