Emberiza cia Linnaeus, 1767 is a animal in the Emberizidae family, order Passeriformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Emberiza cia Linnaeus, 1767 (Emberiza cia Linnaeus, 1767)
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Emberiza cia Linnaeus, 1767

Emberiza cia Linnaeus, 1767

Emberiza cia, the rock bunting, is a 16 cm bird with four subspecies, breeding across dry rocky mountains from northwest Africa to the Himalayas.

Family
Genus
Emberiza
Order
Passeriformes
Class
Aves

About Emberiza cia Linnaeus, 1767

This bird species, the rock bunting (Emberiza cia Linnaeus, 1767), reaches 16 centimeters in total length. Breeding males have chestnut-colored upperparts, solid deep buff underparts, and a pale grey head patterned with black striping. Females are a paler, less distinct version of breeding males, with lighter underparts, a grey-brown back, and a head with less color contrast. Juveniles resemble females, but have streaked patterning on the head. Four subspecies are recognized, which differ mainly in the shade of their plumage. Only the subspecies that breeds in Europe, Africa, and western Turkey has distinct white wing bars. The rock bunting breeds across northwest Africa, southern Europe extending east to central Asia and the Himalayas, and also breeds in scattered local areas within central Europe. It is partially migratory: northern breeding populations travel further south to winter, mostly staying within the breeding range of resident southern populations. It is a rare wandering visitor to western Europe. The rock bunting breeds in open, dry, rocky mountain habitats.

Photo: (c) Анна Голубева, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC-ND), uploaded by Анна Голубева · cc-by-nc-nd

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Passeriformes Emberizidae Emberiza

More from Emberizidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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