Hammerkop
| Hammerkop | ||||||||||||||
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| Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
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| Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
| Scopus umbretta J. F. Gmelin, 1789 |
It occurs in Africa south of the Sahara, Madagascar and southwest Arabia in all wetland habitats including rice paddies. Normally it is seen alone or as a pair. The food is typical of long-legged wading birds, including fish, frogs, rodents and similar small animals.
It builds a huge haystack-like stick nest nearly 2m across in a tree fork, and lays 3 to 6 eggs. The nest is reused each year. It has a noisy call.
The Hammerkop in included in the Ciconiiformes, which also includes other wading bird groups. However, it is a family (Scopidae) and genus (Scopus) all on its own:
- ORDER CICONIIFORMES
- Family Ardeidae: (herons and bitterns)
- Family Cochlearidae: (Boatbill)
- Family Balaenicipitidae: (Shoebill)
- Family Scopidae
- Hammerkop, Scopus umbretta
- Family Ciconiidae: (storks)
- Family Threskiornithidae: (ibises and spoonbills)
- Family Phoenicopteridae: (flamingos)
