Oenanthe leucopyga (Brehm, 1855).
Length 17 cm. A glossy black wheatear with bold white crown, rump, and outer tail feathers. The juvenile and some females lack the white crown. The White-crowned Black Wheatear is resident in arid mountainous and desert areas and in Western Desert oases. It feeds mainly on insects but also takes plant material and small reptiles; it catches its prey in flight, on the ground, or in vegetation. Breeding occurs from March to April; the nest is a cup of dry grass, lined with wool and feathers, sometimes with a base of small stones and placed in holes, among rocks or, occasionally in the walls of buildings. The 3-5 eggs are incubated for 14 days. This is a common and widespread resident breeder found in the Eastern and Western Deserts and Sinai.
