The water rail is a bird of the rail family which breeds in well-vegetated wetlands across Europe, Asia and North Africa. Northern and eastern populations are migratory, but this species is a permanent resident in the warmer parts of its breeding range. It has mainly brown upperparts and blue-grey underparts, black barring on the flanks, long toes, a short tail and a long reddish bill.
About Water rail in brief

However, the genus Rallus, the group of long-billed reed bed specialists to which the water rail belongs, arose in the New World. Its Old World members, the water, African and Madagascan rails, form a superspecies, and are thought to have evolved from a single invasion from across the Atlantic. It became extinct at the same time as human arrival on the island, between 16, 16, and 5,300 BC. The nominate race of water rail, Eivissa, is now a very rare resident on very rare islands on the coast of eastern Europe. The oldest known fossils of an ancestral water rail are bones from Carpathia dated to the Pliocene. By the late Pleistocene, two million years ago, the fossil evidence suggests that the waterrail was present across most of its present range. This species is well-recorded, with over 30 records from Bulgaria alone, and many others from across southern Europe and China. A rail from Eivissus eivissensis was probably smaller but more robust, and probably had poorer flight abilities than the rail, and lacked terrestrial mammals, and this distinctive form presumably descended from its continental relative, the island mammals, from the Quaternary. Males typically weigh 114–164 g, and females are slightly lighter at 92–164 g.
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This page is based on the article Water rail published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 06, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






