The secretarybird or secretary bird is a large, mostly terrestrial bird of prey. Endemic to Africa, it is usually found in the open grasslands and savanna of the sub-Saharan region. Although the secretarybird occurs over a large range, the total population is experiencing a rapid decline, probably as a result of habitat degradation.
About Secretarybird in brief

Breeding can take place at any time of year, but tends to be late in the dry season. The nest is built at the top of a thorny tree, and a clutch of one to three eggs is laid. In years with plentiful food all three young can survive to fledging. It hunts and catches prey on the ground, often stomping on victims to kill them. Insects and small vertebrates make up its diet. It was first described by Arnout Vosmaer in 1769 on the basis of a live specimen that had been sent to Holland from the Cape of Good Hope two years earlier by an official of the Dutch East India Company. The Dutch naturalist suggested that the species was called \”sagittarius\” by the Dutch settlers because its gait was thought to resemble an archer’s. In 1779 the English illustrator John Frederick Miller included a coloured plate of the Secretarybird in his Icones animalium et plantarum and coined the binomial name Falco Serpentarius. The French naturalist Georges Cuvier erected the genus Serpentarius in 1798. In 1835 the Irish naturalist William Ogilby spoke at a meeting of the Zoological Society of London and proposed three species of Secretarybird, distinguishing those from Senegambia as having broader crest feathers than those from South Africa, and reporting a distinct species from the Philippines based on the writings of Pierre Sonat à la Nouvelle-Guinée.
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This page is based on the article Secretarybird published in Wikipedia (as of Dec. 02, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






