Navigate Namibia-03
Navigate Namibia-03
  • Namibia
    • Overview
    • Language
    • History
    • People
  • Travel
    • Travel Advice
    • Tours
    • Accommodations
    • Activities
    • Car Rental
  • Nature
  • Parks
    • All
    • Northern Namibia
    • Southern Namibia
    • Western Namibia
    • Central Namibia
    • Eastern Namibia
    • Communal Conservancies
  • News

Senegal coucal

Centropus senegalensis
Senegal coucals (Centropus senegalensis) inhabit scrub and thickets close to watercourses and between grassland and woodland.

Senegal coucal

Introduction: Senegal coucals (Centropus senegalensis) inhabit scrub and thickets close to watercourses and between grassland and woodland. They also use sugar cane fields, parks and gardens, solitary or in pairs. Will rather run when disturbed than fly.

Distribution: North-eastern Namibia, Caprivi, Bwabwata National Park, Etosha National Park, Tsumkwe and Kaudom Game Park.

Diet: Scans vegetation on the ground for grasshoppers, locusts, crickets, cockroaches, beetles, bugs, termites and crabs. Vertebrate includes small snakes and lizards, nestling birds and eggs. Attacks and kills small birds caught in nets.

Description: Senegalensis is Latin for 'from Senegal'. Head and neck glossy blue-back. Rump blackish-brown with a glossy greenish-black tail. Often confused with white-browed coucal.

Breeding: Unimpressive grass and twig dome structure built by male with side entrance and lined with green leaves. Between 2 and 5 eggs are laid between October and March.

Size: 39cm.

Weight: 170g.

Navigate Namibia

Privacy Policy & GDPR Compliance
Disclaimer
 

 

Follow Gondwana Collection Namibia

Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by namibian.org
EXPLORE NAMIBIA
  • Discover
  • Travel
  • Nature & Parks
  • News & Updates
  • About Us
  • Useful Resources
OUR SISTER BRANDS
  • Gondwana Collection Namibia
  • Namibia2Go
  • Go2 Tourism Shuttle
  • Gondwana Travel Centre
  • The Narrative Online Curio Shop
  • Padlangs Namibia
  • Namibia Weather
PARKS
  • Northern Namibia
  • Southern Namibia
  • Western Namibia
  • Central Namibia
  • Eastern Namibia
  • Communal Conservancies