Wattled Starling

Creatophora cinerea

The Wattled Starling is a nomadic resident in eastern and southern Africa. It is a species of grassland, open woodland and cultivation. This common species appears to be extending its range into West Africa, and has also occurred in Arabia, Madagascar and the Seychelles.
Wattled Starling, couple  Creatophora cinerea,Geotagged,Namibia,Summer,Wattled Starling

Appearance

The Wattled Starling is 21 cm long, with a short tail and pointed wings. It has mainly grey plumage except for a white rump, and black flight feathers and tail. The breeding male has a white shoulder patch and a distinctive head pattern, with unfeathered yellow skin, and black forehead and throat wattles. The extent to which these seasonal features develop increases with the age of the bird, and some old females may show a weaker version of this plumage.

The non-breeding male has a feathered head except for a small yellow patch behind the eye. There are no wattles, but there is a black moustachial stripe. The white shoulder patch is much reduced. The female and juvenile plumages are similar to the non-breeding male, but the flight feathers and tail are brown.

The black flight and tail feathers and white rump make this species unmistakable in flight.
Blacksmith Plover, Hamerkop and Wattled Starlings There's 3 bird species in this photo taken at Tarangire, Tanzania, but I can't find the species of the 5 birds in the middle. You probably need to zoom in to see them, they have a yellow patch around their eye. Africa,Blacksmith Lapwing,Creatophora cinerea,Tanzania,Tarangire,Tarangire National Park,Vanellus armatus,Wattled Starling

Behavior

This species has a range of wheezing or grating calls comparable to those of the Common Starling, but the most familiar is a wheezing ''ssreeeeo''.
Wattled Starling, Kenya  Creatophora cinerea,Geotagged,Kenya,Summer,Wattled Starling

Reproduction

The Wattled Starling is a colonial breeder, and may share its colonies with the Cape Weaver. It always nests in trees or bushes, including acacias and eucalyptus at between 1 and 10 m above the ground. The globular nest is made from twigs and lined with grass or feathers. The two to five, usually three or four, eggs are pale blue, immaculate or with some brown spots, and are laid before the dome of the nest is completed. Both sexes build the nest, incubate the eggs and feed the young.

The eggs hatch after 11 days, and the chicks leave the nest in another 13–16 days. They cannot fly, and suffer heavy predation from large birds of prey.

Breeding is linked to an abundant insect supply, and colonies will be abandoned, even with chicks in the nest, if, for example, locust swarms are destroyed by control measures.
Small flock of Wattled Starlings with a Great Blue-eared Starling  Creatophora cinerea,Great Blue-eared Starling,Harra Lodge,Lake Langano,Lamprotornis chalybaeus,Oromia,Rift Valley,Wattled Starling

Food

Like other starlings, the Wattled Starling is an omnivore, taking a wide range of invertebrates seeds and berries, but its diet is mainly insects including many locusts, leading to the local name “locust bird”.

It will scavenge at rubbish heaps, and frequently perches on livestock, feeding on insects disturbed by the animals and also removing ectoparasites.

Defense

The Wattled Starling is highly gregarious and will form large flocks, often with other starlings. Its reedbed roosts, which can be huge, may also be shared.

References:

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Status: Least concern
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionChordata
ClassAves
OrderPasseriformes
FamilySturnidae
GenusCreatophora
SpeciesC. cinerea