Mass: 5.1 g
Diet: frugivore-insectivore based on Mann 1985; insectivore based on Gove et al. 2013 and Chaskda et al. 2018; omnivore based on Erard and Brosset 2003, Trager and Mistry 2003, Cordeiro et al. 2015, and Smith et al. 2015
Abundance: 0.10 to 13.24% (median 1.55%)
Latitudinal range: -26.2° to 14.7°Habitats: tropical/subtropical dry broadleaf forest (3), tropical/subtropical moist broadleaf forest (5), tropical/subtropical savanna (10)
Found in 18 samples
Angola: Cangandala National Park
Burkina Faso: Cascades Region (2011), Folonzo Village
Cameroon: Nyong River
Ethiopia: Oromia Region (coffee captures), Oromia Region (forest captures)
Ghana: Samole (wet season), Samole (dry season)
Kenya: Nyeri County, Kakamega Forest
Nigeria: Jos Wildlife Park
Senegal: Dakar
South Africa: Tonqani
Uganda: Makerere University Biological Field Station (logged), Makerere University Biological Field Station Compartment K-15
Zambia: Balmoral, Copper Chalice, Kabwe
38.9 mm | N = 1 | ||
26.5 mm | N = 1 |
See also Pycnonotus, Pycnonotus atriceps, Pycnonotus aurigaster, Pycnonotus blanfordi, Pycnonotus brunneus, Pycnonotus cafer, Pycnonotus caffer, Pycnonotus capensis, Pycnonotus cyaniventris, Pycnonotus erythropthalmos, Pycnonotus eutilosus, Pycnonotus eutilotus, Pycnonotus finlaysoni, Pycnonotus goiavier, Pycnonotus gracilis, Pycnonotus jocosus, Pycnonotus jocusus, Pycnonotus leucotos, Pycnonotus melanicterus, Pycnonotus melanoleucos, Pycnonotus nigricans, Pycnonotus plumosus, Pycnonotus simplex, Pycnonotus sinensis, Pycnonotus sp., Pycnonotus tricolor, Pycnonotus urostictus, Pycnonotus virens