About Anhinga rufa (Daudin, 1802)
This species, Anhinga rufa, is commonly known as the African darter. It reaches 80 cm (31 inches) in total length, and like all other anhingas, it has a very long neck. Breeding males are primarily glossy black with white streaking, while females and young immature individuals are a browner overall color. The most noticeable difference in appearance between the African darter and the American darter is the African darter's thin white lateral stripe along its neck, which sits against a rufous-colored background. The species' pointed bill distinguishes it from cormorants, which do not share this bill shape. The African darter is distributed across all of sub-Saharan Africa in areas that contain large bodies of water, and the species as a whole remains widespread and common. There is one non-African subspecies, the Levant darter (Anhinga rufa chantrei), which historically occurred at Lake Amik in south-central Turkey, in the lakes and marshes of the Hula Valley in northern Israel, and in the Mesopotamian Marshes along the lower Euphrates and Tigris rivers in southern Iraq. The Turkish population of this subspecies died out in the 1930s, and the Israeli population was lost in the 1950s when the Hula marshes were drained. In Iran's Khuzestan province, 110 individuals were counted in 1990, but the subspecies was feared extinct after oil spills during the Gulf War and the subsequent drainage of the Mesopotamian Marshes. However, a small surviving population was recorded in the Hawizeh Marshes in 2007. After the Iraq War, the drainage of these marshes was halted and portions of the ecosystem were restored.