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1/125 f/2.8 99.5 mm ISO 320

Panasonic DMC-FZ200

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Anne Elliott
Calgary Zoo
Order: Passeriformes
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Status: Least Concern
Taveta Golden Weaver
Taveta Weaver
Ploceus castaneiceps
Family: Ploceidae
Genus: Ploceus
found in Kenya and Tanzania
Calgary
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nature
birds
female
zoo
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Female Taveta Golden Weaver

Female Taveta Golden Weaver
This photo was taken when I went to the Calgary Zoo, on 6 October 2014. This was only the second time I had been since before the Alberta Flood of the Century in June 2013, which devastated the Zoo and made it necessary to close the Zoo for many months. Several of these small, colourful birds had made nests that were hanging from the leaves of a tropical plant. They are such busy little birds, constantly collecting very narrow, long strands of leaf for their weaving. This bird is a little female, as usual, less colourful than the male - will post a previously posted photo of a male in a comment box below.

"The Taveta weaver (Ploceus castaneiceps) is a species of bird in the Ploceidae family. It is found in Kenya and Tanzania. The name of the bird comes from the unique markings/coloration of the bird, as well as how these birds weave intricate nests.

The male Taveta weaver is a vibrant golden yellow color; this color is duller on its back. The wings and tail are a greener color, whereas brown spots are located on the chest. The back of the head is red, and the bill, or beak, is black. The female is an olive color with paler streaks. In general, the Taveta weaver is a small bird, around the size of the finch and closely related to the sparrow.

These birds live in large groups, or colonies. Weavers often make a unique—often described as "weird"—noise to communicate. Male weavers build extravagant oval nests over water attached to stems of reeds or grasses. The Taveta weavers lay two or three glossy, dark, olive-green eggs. The female bird chooses who she will mate, depending on how impressed she is with a male's skill to construct a nest." From Wikipedia.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taveta_weaver

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