Male © Bradley Hacker 🦜 eBird S47665485 Macaulay Library ML 110273951
Female © Gerald Friesen
Male © Peter Alfrey
Female © Dubi Shapiro
Male © Gerald Friesen
+ 3
Female © Frédéric PELSY
Male © Frédéric PELSY

African Shrike-flycatcher Megabyas flammulatus

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Identification

POWERED BY MERLIN

A distinctive shrike-like bird of forest and forest edge, often seen perched upright on branches wagging its tail from side to side. Looks like a heavyset flycatcher with a large hooked bill, a big head, a relatively short tail, and a large body. Males are typically white below and black above with a red eye and a white rump patch. Females are white below with strong black streaking and white lores, and generally reddish-brown above with darker primary flight feathers. Similar to Black-and-white Shrike-Flycatcher, but African Shrike-Flycatcher has a white throat and no crest, and females have streaked undersides. Calls include a descending “PWHEEEeeeer,” single “cherdew” calls, and doubled sets of variable, almost mechanical phrases: “perit-perit, tchledew-tchledew.”.

POWERED BY MERLIN