Red-headed Malimbe Malimbus rubricollis

Weaver species list / RELATED SPECIES: Bar-winged Weaver / Brown-capped Weaver / Dark-backed Weaver / Golden-naped Weaver / Maxwell’s Black Weaver / Olive-headed Weaver / Preuss’s Weaver / Red-bellied Malimbe / Red-headed Malimbe / Red-headed Weaver / Usambara Weaver / Yellow-capped Weaver / Yellow-legged Weaver / Yellow-mantled Weaver

IUCN: Least concern Discovery: 041

Categories: nuthatch, Malimbus, fruit, nectar, white eggs

Discovery

Red-headed Malimbe male, figure from Vieillot 1805
Red-headed Malimbe
Red-headed Malimbe male (inset is a female showing the black forehead), figure from Fraser 1849
Red-headed Malimbe distribution, type locality circled

 

Introduction

The Red-headed Malimbe was formally described by William John Swainson, an English zoologist and artist.Swainson described this species based on a painting by Louis Jean Pierre Vieillot, a French ornithologist. Vieillot described several weavers from Cabinda, including this species. However, Vieillot, thought that this bird was the female of the Crested Malimbe. Ironically, he noted “We might suspect that this female would be a different species than the male above”. Both Crested and Red-headed Malimbes had been collected by Jean Perrein, a French naturalist, in Cabinda – he saw both species together and thought they belonged to one species (he did not have the luxury of binoculars).

Vieillot noted that Perrein collected this species in the kingdom of Congo; Perrein is known to have been based at Malimbe (now Malembo) and this is taken as the type locality.

The first illustration of a Red-headed Malimbe was published by Vieillot in 1805. The next illustration was published by Fraser 1849 (of a pair collected in Sao Tome).

Scientific citation

Ploceus rubricollis Swainson 1838 Anim. Menag., p.306 Malimba, Portuguese Congo (ex Vieillot, Ois. Chant., pl. 43).

Meaning of names

rubricollis – Latin: ruber, red; Mod. L. -collis, necked.

First English name

Red-crowned Euplectes (Fraser 1849).

Alternate names

Angola Red-headed Malimbe, Bartlett’s Red-headed Weaver, Lagos Red-headed Malimbe, Nigerian Red-headed Weaver, Red-crowned Euplectes, Red-headed Weaver, The red-necked Malimbus, Uganda Malimbe, Upper Guinea Red-headed Malimbe.

Collector

Jean Perrein.

Date collected

Before 1805 when Vieillot described it, and probably before 1802 when Perrein was in Cabinda.

Locality collected

Malimbe =Malembo, Cabinda, Angola.

Type specimens

The type may be in the Paris Natural History Museum.

The above is based on Weaver Wednesday 2, a weekly series about the discovery of each weaver species.
This species text first appeared as Weaver Wednesday [158] – Discovery [41]: Red-headed Malimbe on 2015-06-24

1. Basic biology

Red-headed Malimbe
Red-headed Malimbe male, figure from Birdpix
Red-headed Malimbe
Red-headed Malimbe female, figure from Birdpix

Identification. The Red-headed Malimbe Malimbus rubricollis is the most common and widespread malimbe, occurring over much of West Africa. It differs from the similar-looking Red-crowned Malimbe by the red crown extending to the hindneck and as a half-collar on the sides of the neck. It differs from other malimbes by its all-black underparts. The female Red-headed Malimbe is similar to the male, but the forehead is black. The juvenile is sooty black, and the red on the head is paler and the bill is dark horn.

Distribution. The Red-headed Malimbe occurs from Guinea across West Africa and to East Africa in Uganda and extreme western Kenya (Kakamega and Nyandoro) and Bukoba in Tanzania. It is found on Bioko Island and south to northern Angola (see map above, based on Birds of Africa).

Several races have been proposed, but the differences are slight and it is now treated as monotypic.

Habitat. The Red-headed Malimbe inhabits lowland primary forest, as well as transitional forest, forest edges and clearings, and secondary growth. It is sometimes found in coffee and cocoa plantations, and in small forest patches within farmland.

Food. The Red-headed Malimbe is largely insectivorous, prey items including ants, beetles, grasshoppers, caterpillars and other insect larvae, and alate termites. Other food items are small snails, spiders, fruits and berries. Its diet has been estimated as 50% arthropods, 30% fruit, 20% other material.

It feeds mainly in the canopy, generally 15-45 m high and seldom below 25 m. The Red-headed Malimbe hops along horizontal branches, clambers about, often hanging upside-down; it probes bark, lichens and patches of moss, prying with its bill in search of grubs. It often forages like a woodpecker, unlike other malimbes. It hawks winged termites and other flying insects in forest clearings. It forages in pairs or small parties, and joins mixed-species flocks.

Red-headed Malimbe
Red-headed Malimbe nests fused together, figure from Crook 1964

Breeding. The Red-headed Malimbe is monogamous and a solitary breeder. Courtship consists of male pursuits, and song bows to the female, followed by nest-invitation displays, and courtship feeding.

The nest is retort-shaped with a short, wide entrance tunnel of about 25 cm length. Sometimes 2-5 nests are clustered together, probably all built by one pair, and some nests may be fused together.

The nests are built of tendrils of creepers, grass blades and rootlets of epiphytic orchids. The brood-chamber is usually unlined. The nest is suspended from its top below a branch, 6-45 m above the ground.

Nests have been found close to occupied Palm-nut Vulture Gypohierax angolensis nests, or close to wasp nests. The eggs (clutch 2) are pure white, sometimes with reddish spots. Little else is known about its breeding habits.

The above is based on Weaver Wednesday, a weekly series about weaver species.
This species text first appeared as Weaver Wednesday [92]: Red-headed Malimbe on 2014-03-19

2. Breeding facts

Pair bond
Monogamous


Breeding season
Jul in Sierra Leone, Jan-Apr in Liberia, Dec-Mar in Ghana, Mar in Togo, Apr-May in Benin, mainly Nov-Apr (but activity at nests in all months except Jun and Oct) in Nigeria, in DRCongo, May and Oct in Ituri region and Jan-Mar in Kivu; Feb-Mar in Angola, Apr-Aug in Uganda and Feb in Kenya


Nest site
suspended from top below a branch, 6-30 m above ground in secondary habitats, 30-45 m up in primary forest


Nest building
no information


Colony size
Solitary nester, or in small colonies of up to five nests


Clutch size
2 eggs


Egg colour
pure white, sometimes with reddish spots


Egg size
no information


Incubation
no information


Chicks and nestling period
no information


Breeding information based on Handbook of the Birds of the World, Vol. 15.

3. Photos of Weaver Nests


Vm 5337

Thumb-nails of recent PHOWN records