Erckel's Spurfowl Pternistis erckelii Scientific name definitions
- LC Least Concern
- Names (28)
- Monotypic
Sign in to see your badges
Species names in all available languages
Language | Common name |
---|---|
Catalan | francolí d'Erckel |
Croatian | riđokapa jarebica |
Czech | frankolín Erckelův |
Danish | Rødehavs-bjergfrankolin |
Dutch | Erckels Frankolijn |
English | Erckel's Spurfowl |
English (United States) | Erckel's Spurfowl |
French | Francolin d'Erckel |
French (France) | Francolin d'Erckel |
German | Erckelfrankolin |
Greek | Φραγκολίνος της Ερυθραίας |
Icelandic | Gaddhæna |
Italian | Francolino di Erckel |
Japanese | クロガオシャコ |
Lithuanian | Sudaninis frankolinas |
Norwegian | storfrankolin |
Polish | szponiastonóg brązowogłowy |
Portuguese (Portugal) | Francolim-de-sobrancelhas-pretas |
Romanian | Francolinul lui Eckel |
Russian | Суданский франколин |
Serbian | Etiopski frankolin |
Slovak | frankolínec čiapočkatý |
Slovenian | Eriterijski frankolin |
Spanish | Francolín de Erckel |
Spanish (Spain) | Francolín de Erckel |
Swedish | erckelfrankolin |
Turkish | Erckel Turacı |
Ukrainian | Турач суданський |
Pternistis erckelii (Rüppell, 1835)
Definitions
- PTERNISTIS
- erckelii
The Key to Scientific Names
Legend Overview
Introduction
Editor's Note: Due to a recent taxonomic revision, this species account is still being edited and may contain content from an earlier version of the account.
Editor’s Note: Maps, rich media, and text have been updated to reflect a taxonomic change/split for this species. This species account is still being edited and may contain content from an earlier version of the account which covered multiple species.
Francolins are plump game birds with rounded tails and wings. Erckel's Francolin is endemic to northeastern Africa, but has been introduced to many regions of the world, including Italy, parts of the former Soviet Union, Guam, many islands in the Indian Ocean, and the United States.
Under the direction of the Foreign Game Importation Program, a cooperative effort that included the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and various state fish and game departments, these francolins were introduced for recreational hunting to several U.S. states during the 1950s and 1960s. These attempts at introduction failed on the mainland, but 3 species of introduced francolins, including Erckel's, survived on the main Hawaiian Islands.
Francolins are birds of open habitats that frequent grasslands, shrubby uplands, open thorn forests, and forest edges. Their omnivorous diet has allowed them to adapt to human-altered environments such as cultivated fields, irrigated plantations, golf courses, and roadsides. The distinct Advertisement Calls of francolins are loud and are heard through most of the year. Highly cursorial, francolins prefer to run for cover rather than to fly. Francolins are monogamous, and both parents tend young. Sedentary and gregarious, young stay with parents for several months. Nests are simple scrapes on the ground, sometimes lined with vegetation. Clutch size generally ranges from 4 to 10 eggs. Chicks are highly mobile at hatching; they follow parents shortly after hatching and are capable of finding food on their own (Cramp and Simmons 1980a, del Hoyo et al. 1994).