The Eurasian blackcap is a common and widespread typical warbler. It has mainly olive-grey upperparts and pale grey underparts. Both sexes have a neat coloured cap to the head, black in the male and reddish-brown in the female. The male’s typical song is a rich musical warbling.
About Eurasian blackcap in brief

It can typically be 16–25 cm in length, but can be up to 16–20 cm wide. The nest is a neat cup, built low in brambles or scrub, and the clutch is typically 4–6 mainly buff eggs, which hatch in about 11 days. The chicks fledge in 11–12 days, but are cared for by both adults for some time after leaving the nest. Birds from the colder areas of its range winter in northwestern Europe, around the Mediterranean and in tropical Africa. Some German birds have adapted to spending the winter in gardens in Great Britain and Ireland. Insects are the main food in the breeding season, but, for the rest of the year, blackcaps survive primarily on small fruit. Garden birds also eat bread, fat and peanuts in winter. The genus Sylvia, the typical warblers, forms part of a large family of Old World warbirds, the Sylviidae. It was originally described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae, as Motacilla atricapilla. The current genus name is from Modern Latin silvia, a woodland sprite, related to silva, a wood. The species name, like the English name, refers to the male’s black cap. Atricapillas is from the Latin ater, \”black\”, and capillus, \”hair \”. The oldest, dated to 1.0 million years ago, are from the Early Pleistocene of Bulgaria.
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This page is based on the article Eurasian blackcap published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 06, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






