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Charlie Fleming | profile | all galleries >> Birds of the world in Taxonomic order. Species count to December 2023 is 980 >> Cape Cormorant (Phalacrocorax capensis) tree view | thumbnails | slideshow

Cape Cormorant (Phalacrocorax capensis)

The Cape cormorant or Cape shag (Phalacrocorax capensis) is a bird endemic to the southwestern coasts of Africa.

It breeds from Namibia south to southern Western Cape. In the nonbreeding season, it may be found as far north as the mouth of the Congo, and also extends up the east coast of South Africa as far as Mozambique. In the 1970s, the breeding population was estimated as over 1 million in Namibia alone. However, the IUCN now classifies it as "Endangered" due to a very rapid decline in the population over the last three generations.[1]

The Cape cormorant is an almost entirely glossy black bird, though in breeding condition it has a purplish tinge and a few white plumes on head, neck, and cloacal areas. Its gular skin is a deep orangey yellow; unusually for a cormorant, its lores are feathered.
Cape Cormorant or Cape Shag(Phalacrocorax capensis)
Cape Cormorant or Cape Shag(Phalacrocorax capensis)
Cape Cormorant or Cape Shag(Phalacrocorax capensis)
Cape Cormorant or Cape Shag(Phalacrocorax capensis)