Ploceidae is a family of small passerine , many of which are called weavers, weaverbirds, weaver finches, or bishops. These names come from the nests of intricately woven vegetation created by birds in this family. In most recent classifications, the Ploceidae are a clade that excludes some birds that have historically been placed in the family, such as some of the sparrows, but which includes the monotypic subfamily Amblyospizinae. The family is believed to have originated in the mid-Miocene. All birds of the Ploceidae are native to the Old World, most in Africa south of the Sahara, though a few live in tropical areas of Asia. A few species have been introduced outside their native range.
Taxonomy and systematics
The family Ploceidae was introduced (as Ploceïdes) by Swedish zoologist Carl Jakob Sundevall in 1836.
Phylogenetic studies have shown that the family is
sister taxon to a clade containing the families
Viduidae and
Estrildidae Their common ancestor lived in the middle
Miocene around 18 million years ago.
A 2017 molecular phylogenetic study by Thilina de Silva and collaborators, as well as an expanded study by the same group published in 2019 have indicated that the genus Ploceus as currently defined is polyphyletic. A cladogram based on these results is shown below.[
]
Genera
The family includes 15 genera with a total of 122 species. For more detail, see list of Ploceidae species.
Description
The males of many species in this family are brightly coloured, usually in red or yellow and black. Some species show variation in colour only in the breeding season. These are seed-eating birds with rounded conical bills.
Distribution and habitat
The weaverbird colonies may be found close to bodies of water.
Behaviour and ecology
Weavers are named for their elaborately woven nests. The nests vary in size, shape, material used, and construction techniques from species to species. Materials used for building nests include fine leaf fibers, grass, and twigs. Many species weave very fine nests using thin strands of leaf fiber, though some, like the buffalo-weavers, form massive untidy stick nests in their colonies, which may have spherical woven nests within. The of Africa build apartment-house nests, in which 100 to 300 pairs have separate flask-shaped chambers entered by tubes at the bottom. The sparrow weavers live in family units that employ cooperative breeding.
Most species weave nests that have narrow entrances, facing downward.
Many weaver species are gregarious and breed Bird colony. The birds build their nests together for protection, often several to a branch. Usually, the male birds weave the nests and use them as a form of display to lure prospective females.
Relationship to humans
They sometimes cause crop damage, notably the red-billed quelea, reputed to be the world's most numerous bird.[Fry, C.H. & Keith, S. (2004) The birds of Africa vol. VII. Christopher Helm, London]
Gallery
File:Under Construction - Weaver Bird.jpg|A nest in the early stages of construction
File:Weaverbirds at West Bengal.jpg|Weaverbirds at West Bengal
File:Sporopipes squamifrons 1838.jpg|Adult Sporopipes at its spherical grass nest, placed in a shrub
File:Nids de Plocepasser mahali (Namibie) (3).jpg| Plocepasser nest in Namibia, for year-round occupation.
File:2010-09-25 09-03-47 Namibia Hardap Isabis.jpg|Communal Philetairus nests in central Namibia
File:Pseudonigrita-arnaudi-Nest.JPG| Pseudonigrita nest in Kenya, with entrance below
File:Black-breasted Weaver Ploceus benghalensis by Dr. Raju Kasambe 03.jpg|Black-breasted weaver nest suspended from grass, India
File:Ploceidae.jpg|A baya weaver on his unfinished nest, northern India
File:Nests_in_Palmyra_Palm_tree.jpg|Nests of a baya weaver colony suspended from a palm tree, India
File:Red-billed Quelea (Quelea quelea) (6041539514).jpg|Male Quelea quelea at nest concealed in thorny Senegalia shrub
File:Euplectes orix -Pretoria, South Africa -male weaving nest-8 (1).jpg|Red bishop constructing a nest in reeds, South Africa
File:Weaver bird nests at Ifaty (3445328641).jpg|Nests of a colony of , Madagascar
File:GambiaGeorgeTown043 (12249665914).jpg|Spherical village weaver nests suspended from a palm tree, West Africa
File:Tisserin Etosha.jpg|A southern masked weaver building his nest, Namibia
File:ASC Leiden - van de Bruinhorst Collection - Somaliland 2019 - 4530 - A detail of the nest of weaver birds hanging from a tree.jpg|Hanging nest, Hargeysa, Somaliland, July 2019.
Further reading