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Drongos

Drongos comprise a family of passerine birds, Dicruridae, with thirty species in the Old World tropics, all belonging to the genus Dicrurus. These birds are primarily black or dark grey with short legs, forked tails—some with distinct decorations—and an upright stance when perched. They are skilled insect hunters, capturing their prey mid-flight or from the ground, and some can mimic the calls of other species. Remarkably, fork-tailed drongos in the Kalahari desert use fake alarm calls to trick other animals into abandoning their food, which the drongos then steal. The family originated in the Indo-Malayan region, spreading to Africa and across the Wallace Line into Australasia. Drongos are known for their courage, even attacking larger animals to defend their nests. "Drongo" is also Australian slang for "idiot" possibly due to an infamous racehorse by that name that consistently failed to win races.

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Albatrosses
Anhingas, Darters
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Crows, Jays
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Cuckooshrikes

Drongos

Ducks, Geese, Swans
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Jacanas
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Old World Sparrows, Snowfinches
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Owls
Oystercatchers
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Painted-snipes
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Rollers
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Shriketit
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Skuas
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Sunbirds
Swallows, Martins
Swifts
Thrushes
Tits, Chickadees
Treeswifts
Tropicbirds
Typical Broadbills
Vangas & Allies
Vireos, Greenlets, Shrike-babblers
Wagtails, Pipits
Waxbills, Munias & Allies
Whipbirds
Whistlers & Allies
White-eyes
Woodpeckers
Woodswallows, Butcherbirds & Allies

Balicassiao

Dicrurus balicassius

Crow-billed Drongo

Dicrurus annectens
A photo of a Hair-crested Drongo (Dicrurus hottentottus)

Hair-crested Drongo

Dicrurus hottentottus

Paradise Drongo

Dicrurus megarhynchus
A photo of a Spangled Drongo (Dicrurus bracteatus)

Spangled Drongo

Dicrurus bracteatus

Wallacean Drongo

Dicrurus densus
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Species Categories

Albatrosses

Anhingas, Darters

Asian Barbets

Austral Storm Petrels

Australasian Babblers

Australasian Robins

Australasian Treecreepers

Australasian Warblers

Australasian Wrens

Australian Mudnesters

Australo-Papuan Bellbirds

Barn Owls

Bee-eaters

Berrypeckers, Longbills

Birds-of-paradise

Boatbills

Bowerbirds

Bristlebirds

Bulbuls

Buntings

Bustards

Buttonquail

Caracaras, Falcons

Cassowaries, Emu

Cettia Bush Warblers & Allies

Chats, Old World Flycatchers

Cisticolas & Allies

Cockatoos

Cormorants, Shags

Coursers, Pratincoles

Cranes

Crows, Jays

Cuckoos

Cuckooshrikes

Drongos

Ducks, Geese, Swans

Fairy Flycatchers

Fairy-bluebirds

Fantails

Figbirds, Orioles, Turnagra

Finches, Euphonias

Flamingos

Flowerpeckers

Flufftails

Frigatebirds

Frogmouths

Gannets, Boobies

Grassbirds & Allies

Grebes

Guineafowl

Gulls, Terns, Skimmers

Herons, Bitterns

Honeyeaters

Hoopoes

Hornbills

Ibises, Spoonbills

Ifrit

Jacanas

Jewel-babblers, Quail-thrushes

Kingfishers

Kites, Hawks, Eagles

Larks

Leaf Warblers & Allies

Logrunners

Lyrebirds

Magpie Goose

Megapodes

Melampittas

Monarchs

Mottled Berryhunter

New World Quail

Nightjars

Northern Storm Petrels

Old World Parrots

Old World Sparrows, Snowfinches

Ospreys

Ostriches

Owlet-nightjars

Owls

Oystercatchers

Painted Berrypeckers

Painted-snipes

Pardalotes

Pelicans

Penguins

Petrels, Shearwaters, Diving Petrels

Pheasants & Allies

Pigeons, Doves

Pittas

Plains-wanderer

Ploughbill

Plovers

Rails, Crakes & Coots

Reed Warblers & Allies

Rollers

Sandpipers, Snipes

Satinbirds

Scrubbirds

Shrikes

Shriketit

Sittellas

Skuas

Starlings, Rhabdornis

Stilts, Avocets

Stone-curlews, Thick-knees

Storks

Sunbirds

Swallows, Martins

Swifts

Thrushes

Tits, Chickadees

Treeswifts

Tropicbirds

Typical Broadbills

Vangas & Allies

Vireos, Greenlets, Shrike-babblers

Wagtails, Pipits

Waxbills, Munias & Allies

Whipbirds

Whistlers & Allies

White-eyes

Woodpeckers

Woodswallows, Butcherbirds & Allies

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