The European red-rumped swallow (Cecropis rufula) is a small passerine bird in the swallow family Hirundinidae. Historically, it was usually treated in a broad concept of the genus Hirundo, but is now treated in the genus Cecropis. It was formerly considered to be a subspecies of the eastern red-rumped swallow (Cecropis daurica), united, together with the African red-rumped swallow (C. melanocrissus, syn. C. domicella), under the common name of red-rumped swallow.
European red-rumped swallow is somewhat similar in habits and appearance to the other aerial insectivores, such as the related swallows and the unrelated swifts (order Apodiformes). It has blue-glossed black upperparts and pale buffy underparts. Within Europe, it most closely resembles barn swallow, but is easily distinguished by being buffier below, with pale orangey or reddish rump, a pale buffy face and throat, and an orangey-red nape collar. It lacks the breast band of barn swallow, but has a black undertail, giving the appearance of the whole tail as being 'dipped in ink' and lacking the white tail spots of barn swallow. The tail is deeply forked, much more than western house martin but slightly less than barn swallow. It is a fast flier with long, broad but pointed wings, and swoops on insects while airborne. On its wintering grounds, it can only be distinguished from the African red-rumped swallow by the rump being slightly broader and less strongly rufous orange. Eastern red-rumped swallow is a rare vagrant in Europe; it can be distinguished from its European relative by the streaked underparts, and lack of a clear rufous nape collar.
Juveniles differ from adults in having duller (slightly greyish black, not blue-glossed) upperparts, a paler buffy white rump, and slightly shorter tail streamers, though the tail is still more deeply forked than western house martins.
The European red-rumped swallow was formally described in 1835 by the Dutch zoologist Coenraad Jacob Temminck under the binomial name Hirundo rufula.] The specific epithet is from Latin rufulus meaning "reddish". The species was formerly treated as a subspecies of the red-rumped swallow (Cecropis daurica) now renamed the eastern red-rumped swallow. The species were split based on differences in morphology and genetic divergence. The European red-rumped swallow is monotypic, with no subspecies.
It breeds in open country of northwest Africa, southern Europe and southwest and central Asia east to Kazakhstan, northern and western Pakistan and the far northwest of India. During winter it migrates to Africa, mainly in the Sahel and Sudanian savanna regions; its wintering range is not clearly known due to the ease of confusion with the very similar African red-rumped swallow (C. melanocrissus, syn. C. domicella) which is resident in the region. In northern Europe, it is a scarce but regular migrant in small numbers, mainly as a spring overshoot, but also some in autumn.
These swallows are usually found over hilly and montane grassland, farmland, gardens, villages, and open woodland, where they hawk for insects, often together with other swallows and martins.
European red-rumped swallows build quarter-sphere nests with a tunnel entrance lined with mud collected in their beaks, and lay 3 to 6 eggs. They nest under cliff overhangs, and have readily adapted to using buildings such as bridges and road underpasses. They do not normally form large breeding colonies, but are gregarious outside the breeding season.
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