Caprimulgus is a large and very widespread genus of nightjars, medium-sized nocturnal birds with long pointed wings, short legs and short bills. Caprimulgus is derived from the Latin capra, "nanny goat", and mulgere, "to milk", referring to an old myth that nightjars suck milk from goats. The common name "nightjar", first recorded in 1630, refers to the nocturnal habits of the bird, the second part of the name deriving from the distinctive churring song.

Caprimulgus nightjars are found around Afro-Eurasia and Australasia, and like other nightjars they usually nest on the ground. They are mostly active in the late evening and early morning or at night, and feed predominantly on moths and other large flying insects.

Most have small feet, of little use for walking, and their soft plumage is cryptically coloured to resemble bark or leaves. Some species, unusually for birds, perch along a branch, rather than across it, which helps to conceal them during the day. Temperate species are strongly migratory, wintering in the tropics.

Caprimulgus species have relatively long bills and rictal bristles. Many have repetitive and often mechanical songs.

Taxonomy

The genus Caprimulgus was introduced in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae. The type species is the European nightjar (Caprimulgus europaeus). The name is the Latin word for a nightjar; it combines capra meaning "nanny goat" and mulgere meaning "to milk". The myth that nightjars suck milk from goats is recounted by Pliny the Elder in his Natural History: "Those called goat-suckers, which resemble a rather large blackbird, are night thieves. They enter the shepherds' stalls and fly to the goats' udders in order to suck their milk, which injures the udder and makes it perish, and the goats they have milked in this way gradually go blind."

Species

The genus contains 39 species.

ImageScientific nameCommon nameDistribution
Caprimulgus ruficollisRed-necked nightjarwestern Mediterranean
Caprimulgus indicusJungle nightjarIndia and Sri Lanka
Caprimulgus jotakaGrey nightjarEast Asia and Himalayas; winters to Southeast Asia
-Caprimulgus phalaenaPalau nightjarPalau
Caprimulgus europaeusEuropean nightjarwestern palearctic; winters to Sub-Saharan Africa
Caprimulgus fraenatusSombre nightjarEast Africa
Caprimulgus rufigenaRufous-cheeked nightjarsouthern Africa
Caprimulgus aegyptiusEgyptian nightjarMorocco to Sudan and southern Kazakhstan
Caprimulgus mahrattensisSykes's nightjarPakistan, southern Afghanistan and Iran; winters to India
Caprimulgus nubicusNubian nightjarRed Sea area and Horn of Africa
Caprimulgus eximiusGolden nightjarSahel
Caprimulgus atripennisJerdon's nightjarsouthern India and Sri Lanka
Caprimulgus macrurusLarge-tailed nightjarnorthern Pakistan though Southeast Asia to Queensland and New Guinea
Caprimulgus meesiMees's nightjarFlores and Sumba
-Caprimulgus ritaeTimor nightjareastern Lesser Sundas
Caprimulgus andamanicusAndaman nightjarAndaman Islands
Caprimulgus manillensisPhilippine nightjarPhilippines
-Caprimulgus celebensisSulawesi nightjarSulawesi and Sula Islands
Caprimulgus donaldsoniDonaldson Smith's nightjarHorn of Africa to northern Tanzania
Caprimulgus pectoralisFiery-necked nightjarSub-Saharan Africa
Caprimulgus poliocephalusMontane nightjareastern Afromontane
Caprimulgus asiaticusIndian nightjarSouth Asia to southern Indochina
Caprimulgus madagascariensisMadagascar nightjarSeychelles and Madagascar
Caprimulgus natalensisSwamp nightjarsparsely across Sub-Saharan Africa
Caprimulgus solalaNechisar nightjarNechisar Plains, Ethiopia
Caprimulgus inornatusPlain nightjarnorthern Sub-Saharan Africa and southwestern Arabia; winters to more southern latitudes
Caprimulgus stellatusStar-spotted nightjarEthiopia, northern Kenya and southern South Sudan
Caprimulgus affinisSavanna nightjarIndomalaya
Caprimulgus griseatusChirruping nightjarPhilippines
Caprimulgus tristigmaFreckled nightjarSub-Saharan Africa
-Caprimulgus concretusBonaparte's nightjarSumatra and Borneo
-Caprimulgus pulchellusSalvadori's nightjarmontane Sumatra and Java
-Caprimulgus prigogineiPrigogine's nightjarItombwe Mountains
Caprimulgus batesiBates's nightjarCongo Basin
Caprimulgus climacurusLong-tailed nightjarnorthern Sub-Saharan Africa
Caprimulgus clarusSlender-tailed nightjarEast Africa
Caprimulgus fossiiSquare-tailed nightjarmiombo and adjacent areas
-Caprimulgus longipennisStandard-winged nightjarforested areas of northern Sub-Saharan Africa
Caprimulgus vexillariusPennant-winged nightjarmiombo; winters in equatorial latitudes