Talk:Golden-headed cisticola
A fact from Golden-headed cisticola appeared on Wikipedia's Main Page in the Did you know column on 13 February 2019 (check views). The text of the entry was as follows:
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File:Cisticola exilis - Cornwallis Rd.jpg scheduled for POTD
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The golden-headed cisticola (Cisticola exilis) is a species of warbler in the family Cisticolidae, found in Asia and Australia. An unobtrusive bird, it forages for invertebrates, such as insects and small slugs, near the ground, but supplements its diet with grass seeds. Both sexes construct the rounded nest with a side entrance in a grass tussock or among tangled herbage. Built of green leaves and fine grasses and lined with soft plant down, it is stitched together with cobweb silk and camouflaged on the outside with further herbage. The female incubates the eggs and the male drives off intruders, but despite this concealment and care, only 32 per cent of the eggs successfully hatch. This golden-headed cisticola was photographed near Cornwallis, New South Wales, in Australia. Photograph credit: John Harrison
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