Ploceidae is a family of small passerine birds, many of which are called weavers, weaverbirds, weaver finches, or bishops. These names come from the nests of intricately woven vegetation created by birds in this family. In most recent classifications, the Ploceidae are a clade that excludes some birds that have historically been placed in the family, such as some of the sparrows, but which includes the monotypic subfamily Amblyospizinae. The family is believed to have originated in the mid-Miocene. All birds of the Ploceidae are native to the Old World, most in Africa south of the Sahara, though a few live in tropical areas of Asia. A few species have been introduced outside their native range.

Taxonomy and systematics

The family Ploceidae was introduced (as Ploceïdes) by Swedish zoologist Carl Jakob Sundevall in 1836. Phylogenetic studies have shown that the family is sister to a clade containing the families Viduidae and Estrildidae Their common ancestor lived in the middle Miocene around 18 million years ago.

A 2017 molecular phylogenetic study by Thilina de Silva and collaborators, as well as an expanded study by the same group published in 2019 have indicated that the genus Ploceus as currently defined is polyphyletic. A cladogram based on these results is shown below. For more detail, see list of Ploceidae species.

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! Genus

!Species

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|Bubalornis

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  • Red-billed buffalo weaver (Bubalornis niger)
  • White-billed buffalo weaver (Bubalornis albirostris)

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|Dinemellia

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  • White-headed buffalo weaver (Dinemellia dinemelli)

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|Plocepasser

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  • Donaldson Smith's sparrow-weaver (Plocepasser donaldsoni)
  • Chestnut-backed sparrow-weaver (Plocepasser rufoscapulatus)
  • Chestnut-crowned sparrow-weaver (Plocepasser superciliosus)
  • White-browed sparrow-weaver (Plocepasser mahali)

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|Histurgops

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  • Rufous-tailed weaver (Histurgops ruficauda)

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|Pseudonigrita

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  • Grey-capped social weaver (Pseudonigrita arnaudi)
  • Black-capped social weaver (Pseudonigrita cabanisi)

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|Philetairus

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  • Sociable weaver (Philetairus socius)

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|Sporopipes

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  • Speckle-fronted weaver (Sporopipes frontalis)
  • Scaly-feathered weaver (Sporopipes squamifrons)

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|Amblyospiza

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  • Thick-billed weaver (Amblyospiza albifrons)

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|Ploceus

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  • Baglafecht weaver (Ploceus baglafecht)
  • Bannerman's weaver (Ploceus bannermani)
  • Bates's weaver (Ploceus batesi)
  • Black-chinned weaver (Ploceus nigrimentus)
  • Bertram's weaver (Ploceus bertrandi)
  • Slender-billed weaver (Ploceus pelzelni)
  • Loango weaver (Ploceus subpersonatus)
  • Little weaver (Ploceus luteolus)
  • Spectacled weaver (Ploceus ocularis)
  • Black-necked weaver (Ploceus nigricollis)
  • Olive-naped weaver (Ploceus brachypterus)
  • Strange weaver (Ploceus alienus)
  • Black-billed weaver (Ploceus melanogaster)
  • Cape weaver (Ploceus capensis)
  • Bocage's weaver (Ploceus temporalis)
  • Eastern golden weaver (Ploceus subaureus)
  • Holub's golden weaver (Ploceus xanthops)
  • Orange weaver (Ploceus aurantius)
  • Heuglin's masked weaver (Ploceus heuglini)
  • Golden palm weaver (Ploceus bojeri)
  • Taveta weaver (Ploceus castaneiceps)
  • Príncipe weaver (Ploceus princeps)
  • Northern brown-throated weaver (Ploceus castanops)
  • Southern brown-throated weaver (Ploceus xanthopterus)
  • Ruvu weaver (Ploceus holoxanthus)
  • Kilombero weaver (Ploceus burnieri)
  • Rüppell's weaver (Ploceus galbula)
  • Northern masked weaver (Ploceus taeniopterus)
  • Lesser masked weaver (Ploceus intermedius)
  • Southern masked weaver (Ploceus velatus)
  • Katanga masked weaver (Ploceus katangae)
  • Lufira masked weaver (Ploceus ruweti)
  • Tanzanian masked weaver (Ploceus reichardi)
  • Vitelline masked weaver (Ploceus vitellinus)
  • Speke's weaver (Ploceus spekei)
  • Fox's weaver (Ploceus spekeoides)
  • Village weaver (Ploceus cucullatus)
  • Giant weaver (Ploceus grandis)
  • Vieillot's black weaver (Ploceus nigerrimus)
  • Chestnut-and-black weaver (Ploceus castaneofuscus)
  • Weyns's weaver (Ploceus weynsi)
  • Kilifi weaver (Ploceus golandi)
  • Juba weaver (Ploceus dichrocephalus)
  • Black-headed weaver (Ploceus melanocephalus)
  • Golden-backed weaver (Ploceus jacksoni)
  • Cinnamon weaver (Ploceus badius)
  • Chestnut weaver (Ploceus rubiginosus)
  • Golden-naped weaver (Ploceus aureonucha)
  • Yellow-mantled weaver (Ploceus tricolor)
  • Maxwell's black weaver (Ploceus albinucha)
  • Nelicourvi weaver (Ploceus nelicourvi)
  • Sakalava weaver (Ploceus sakalava)
  • Asian golden weaver (Ploceus hypoxanthus)
  • Black-breasted weaver (Ploceus benghalensis)
  • Streaked weaver (Ploceus manyar)
  • Baya weaver (Ploceus philippinus)
  • Finn's weaver (Ploceus megarhynchus)
  • Dark-backed weaver (Ploceus bicolor)
  • Preuss's weaver (Ploceus preussi)
  • Yellow-capped weaver (Ploceus dorsomaculatus)
  • Olive-headed weaver (Ploceus olivaceiceps)
  • Usambara weaver (Ploceus nicolli)
  • Brown-capped weaver (Ploceus insignis)
  • Bar-winged weaver (Ploceus angolensis)
  • São Tomé weaver (Ploceus sanctithomae)
  • Yellow-legged weaver (Ploceus flavipes)

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|Pachyphantes

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  • Compact weaver (Pachyphantes superciliosus)

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|Malimbus

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  • Red-crowned malimbe (Malimbus coronatus)
  • Cassin's malimbe (Malimbus cassini)
  • Rachel's malimbe (Malimbus racheliae)
  • Gola malimbe (Malimbus ballmanni)
  • Red-vented malimbe (Malimbus scutatus)
  • Ibadan malimbe (Malimbus ibadanensis)
  • Blue-billed malimbe (Malimbus nitens)
  • Red-headed malimbe (Malimbus rubricollis)
  • Red-bellied malimbe (Malimbus erythrogaster)
  • Crested malimbe (Malimbus malimbicus)

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|Quelea

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  • Cardinal quelea (Quelea cardinalis)
  • Red-headed quelea (Quelea erythrops)
  • Red-billed quelea (Quelea quelea)

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|Anaplectes

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  • Red-headed weaver (Anaplectes rubriceps)
  • Red weaver (Anaplectes jubaensis)

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|Foudia

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  • Red fody or Madagascar fody (Foudia madagascariensis)
  • Comoros fody or red-headed fody (Foudia eminentissima)
  • Aldabra fody (Foudia aldabrana)
  • Forest fody (Foudia omissa)
  • Mauritius fody (Foudia rubra)
  • Seychelles fody (Foudia sechellarum)
  • Rodrigues fody (Foudia flavicans)
  • Réunion fody (Foudia delloni)

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|Brachycope

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  • Bob-tailed weaver (Brachycope anomala)

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|Euplectes

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  • Yellow-crowned bishop (Euplectes afer)
  • Fire-fronted bishop (Euplectes diadematus)
  • Black bishop (Euplectes gierowii)
  • Black-winged red bishop (Euplectes hordeaceus)
  • Northern red bishop or orange bishop (Euplectes franciscanus)
  • Southern red bishop or red bishop (Euplectes orix)
  • Zanzibar red bishop (Euplectes nigroventris)
  • Golden-backed bishop (Euplectes aureus)
  • Yellow bishop (Euplectes capensis)
  • Fan-tailed widowbird (Euplectes axillaris)
  • Yellow-mantled widowbird (Euplectes macroura)
  • White-winged widowbird (Euplectes albonotatus)
  • Red-collared widowbird (Euplectes ardens)
  • Red-cowled widowbird (Euplectes laticauda)
  • Marsh widowbird (Euplectes hartlaubi)
  • Montane widowbird (Euplectes psammacromius)
  • Long-tailed widowbird (Euplectes progne)
  • Jackson's widowbird (Euplectes jacksoni)

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Description

The males of many species in this family are brightly coloured, usually in red or yellow and black. Some species show variation in colour only in the breeding season. These are seed-eating birds with rounded conical bills.

Distribution and habitat

The weaverbird colonies may be found close to bodies of water.

Behaviour and ecology

Weavers are named for their elaborately woven nests. The nests vary in size, shape, material used, and construction techniques from species to species. Materials used for building nests include fine leaf fibers, grass, and twigs. Many species weave very fine nests using thin strands of leaf fiber, though some, like the buffalo-weavers, form massive untidy stick nests in their colonies, which may have spherical woven nests within. The sociable weavers of Africa build apartment-house nests, in which 100 to 300 pairs have separate flask-shaped chambers entered by tubes at the bottom. The sparrow weavers live in family units that employ cooperative breeding.

Most species weave nests that have narrow entrances, facing downward.

Many weaver species are gregarious and breed colonially.

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File:Under Construction - Weaver Bird.jpg|A nest in the early stages of construction

File:Weaverbirds at West Bengal.jpg|Weaverbirds at West Bengal

File:Sporopipes squamifrons 1838.jpg|Adult Sporopipes at its spherical grass nest, placed in a shrub

File:Nids de Plocepasser mahali (Namibie) (3).jpg|Plocepasser nest in Namibia, for year-round occupation.