The Pin-tailed Vireo is a bird of the genus Vireo in the family Vireidae.


The male and female pin-tailed vireos are about 12cm long (excluding the tail), while the male's tail is about 20cm long.


In the non-breeding season, both sexes have yellowish-brown plumage with stripes.


During the breeding season, the pin-tailed vireo, like other vireo males, turns a beautiful black-blue color, dragging its long black tail feathers through the air, frequently flying, hovering, and resting on stakes, looking for a mate to court and mate with.


The long-tailed vireo of the genus Vireo lives in open savannas and open forests and likes to move in groups.


They eat fruits, seeds, and shoots, as well as insects and worms.


Like the cuckoo, the vireo has distinctive breeding habits, laying its eggs in the nests of other finches and allowing them to hatch on its behalf.


This is a nest parasitic bird, usually laying its eggs in the nest of a specific merganser and having it incubate them.


A representative species is the pin-tailed vireo.


Birds of the genus Vidal's are nest parasites, usually laying their eggs in the nests of birds of the family Melanogaster, and the young are fed by their hosts.


Unlike the cuckoo, Vidal's finches are kinder and do not destroy the eggs of their hosts.


There are 19 species of birds in the genus Vidal.


Veldar birds live in grasslands and open forests Veldar birds like to move in groups.


Veldar birds mainly eat fruits, seeds and shoots, and Veldar birds also eat insects and worms.


Veldar birds do not build nests. Veldar birds are nest parasites with relatively stable hosts, mainly birds of the family Melidae, and their young are fed and raised by their hosts.


Although small, some of these Veldar birds have the absolute largest proportion of the bird's body taken up by the long tail, and this bird is unattractive, with rare tail feathers.


The male is mainly black, with four medium tail feathers that are extremely long, topping the finches with tail feathers, and is one of the most famous bird species in Africa, mainly in tropical Africa.


The Vida is the collective name for several species of small African birds with long dark tails.


The Veldar is about 10 to 13 centimeters in length. Vital birds are small finches, songbirds with complex song tube structures and song muscles, and have a varied and pleasant calls.


Vital birds are off-toed, with three toes in front and one behind, and the hind toe is as long as the middle toe.


The legs are thin and weak, and the scales on the posterior edge of the tarsus and metatarsus are often fused into a whole scale plate,


the skull is finch palate type.


Vital birds have short bodies.


Most males of Vital birds are predominantly black during the breeding season, and Vital birds have extensive black plumage, and the four middle tail feathers of Vital birds are extremely long.


Females and non-breeding males are mostly brown-feathered and striped.


Velders are found in sub-Saharan African countries, including Angola, Botswana, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Congo, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo.


Vendors are polygamous, and a single male can mate with 10 or 12 females in a given season.


Females lay three to four eggs per season.