
| Length = 7.8 in, 20 cm | copyright Herbert Clarke |
Nocturnal and shy, this bird is much more often heard than
seen. It can be found regularly sitting in the middle of a lonely gravel
road where it will fly up in the headlights of a vehicle like a huge moth.
Apparently it spends much of the winter in northern parts of its range in a
state of torpor or hibernation concealed in rock piles. It catches insects
at night in its gaping mouth by flying low over the desert floor. Its nest
is a shallow depression on the ground, usually near a steep hill. |