Tschudi's Nightjar Quechuavis decussata Scientific name definitions
- LC Least Concern
- Names (25)
- Monotypic
Revision Notes
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Species names in all available languages
| Language | Common name |
|---|---|
| Afrikaans | Tschudnaguil |
| Bulgarian | Перуански козодой |
| Catalan | enganyapastors alabarrat petit |
| Croatian | peruanski leganj |
| Czech | lelek peruánský |
| Dutch | Peruaanse nachtzwaluw |
| English | Tschudi's Nightjar |
| English (AVI) | Tschudi's Nightjar |
| English (United States) | Tschudi's Nightjar |
| French | Engoulevent de Tschudi |
| French (Canada) | Engoulevent de Tschudi |
| German | Schmalspiegel-Nachtschwalbe |
| Japanese | チューディヨタカ |
| Norwegian | chiasmanattravn |
| Polish | lelkowiec ubogi |
| Russian | Атакамский козодой |
| Serbian | Čudijev leganj |
| Slovak | lelek suchomilný |
| Spanish | Chotacabras Ñañarca |
| Spanish (Chile) | Gallina ciega chica |
| Spanish (Peru) | Chotacabras de Tschudi |
| Spanish (Spain) | Chotacabras ñañarca chico |
| Swedish | tschudinattskärra |
| Turkish | Tschudi Çobanaldatanı |
| Ukrainian | Дрімлюга перуанський |
Revision Notes
Shawn M. Billerman contributed to the Systematics section. Nicole M. Richardson prepared the account for the 2024 Clements taxonomy update.
Quechuavis decussata (Tschudi, 1844)
Definitions
- QUECHUAVIS
- decussata / decussatus
The Key to Scientific Names
Legend Overview
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Introduction
Tschudi's Nightjar is named after Johann Jakob von Tschudi, a Swiss explorer who visited Peru in the early 19th century, and who was the first European naturalist to notice this species. This bird just as easily could be called "Desert Nightar," however, as it is restricted to the very arid coast of Peru and northern Chile. Tschudi's Nightjar formerly was considered to be a subspecies of the very widespread Band-winged Nightjar (Systellura longirostris), but the song of Tschudi's Nightjar now is known to be very different from that of Band-winged Nightjar, and genetic analysis confirms that these two species are not closely related. This nightjar occurs in arid scrub and fields, as well as in urban areas, even in the city of Lima. It roosts on the ground during the day, singly or in pairs, and forages for insects at night. Otherwise very little is known about the biology of Tschudi's Nightjar.
Subspecies
- Year-round
- Migration
- Breeding
- Non-Breeding