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Overview
Bates's nightjar

Bates's nightjar

Wikipedia

Bates's nightjar or the forest nightjar, is a bird species of the family Caprimulgidae, native to the Congolian rainforests.

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Distribution

Region

Congo Basin and Central African lowland forests

Typical Environment

Found in lowland evergreen rainforest across the Congo Basin, including southern Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon, the Republic of the Congo, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and neighboring areas. It favors interior forest but also uses edges, old logging roads, and light gaps for foraging. Roosting typically occurs on leaf litter in shaded understory. It can persist in secondary forest and selectively logged habitats where sufficient cover remains.

Altitude Range

Sea level to 1200 m

Climate Zone

Tropical

Characteristics

Size19–22 cm
Wing Span42–48 cm
Male Weight0.05 kg
Female Weight0.048 kg
Life Expectancy8 years

Ease of Keeping

Beginner friendly: 1/5

Useful to know

Bates's nightjar, also called the forest nightjar, is a strictly nocturnal species that relies on superb leaf-litter camouflage by day. It hunts by sallying for flying insects along forest tracks and clearings at dusk and night. The species places its egg directly on the forest floor without building a nest. It is named after the collector George Latimer Bates.

Gallery

Bird photo
Bird photo

Behaviour

Temperament

secretive and crepuscular-nocturnal

Flight Pattern

buoyant, moth-like with short rapid wingbeats

Social Behavior

Generally solitary, forming pairs during the breeding season. Nests are a simple scrape on leaf litter with typically a single egg. Adults depend on camouflage and remain motionless when approached, flushing only at close range.

Migratory Pattern

Resident

Song Description

A soft, low churring or trilling phrase delivered repeatedly at dusk and night. Also gives thin tsip contact calls while foraging along forest tracks.

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