Dipper
Taxonomy & Facts
dipper, (genus Cinclus), also called water ouzel, any of five species of songbirds of the Cinclidae family (order Passeriformes) noted for insect hunting by walking underwater in rushing streams and named for their frequent body bobbing.
Study the effect of climate change on the breeding behavior of Eurasian dipper through a banding technique used by an ornithologist in IrelandSee all videos for this article
Among the best-known species are the Eurasian, or white-throated, dipper (Cinclus cinclus), blackish brown with a white breast, found from northern Africa and Europe to Manchuria, and the North American dipper (C. mexicanus), dull gray in colour, found from Alaska to Panama, east to the foothills of the Rockies. The white-capped dipper (C. leucocephalus) and the rufous-throated dipper (C. schulzii) are found in mountainous areas of South America. There is also an Asiatic species, the brown dipper (C. pallasii), found from the Himalayas to China, Korea, and Japan.
white-throated dipper (Cinclus cinclus)
Dippers are plump stub-tailed birds, about 18 cm (7 inches) long, with thrushlike bills and legs. The nest is a dome of moss built in a crevice, often behind a waterfall.
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