White-fronted Wattle-eye

Platysteira albifrons

Near Threatened

The White-fronted Wattle-eye is a small African forest or woodland insectivore, often flicking through the understorey for flies, beetles, and caterpillars in West African forests and wooded savannas. It is generally resident, using local forest, scrub, or woodland year-round and shifting within its range as food changes. Fun fact: this batch includes some of the most distinctive island lineages in the bird catalog, from toxic ifritas to display-rich birds-of-paradise.

Family
Platysteiridae
Range
White-fronted Wattle-eye Range — Resident range in West African forests and wooded savannas
Population
≈ Unknown
Save in the MyBird app