Since the independence of South Sudan, the Republic of Sudan is now the third largest country in Africa. In the north-east, Sudan has a 853 km long coastline on the Red Sea. The landscape is shaped by the Nile basin and its mountain ranges, with the highest point being Mount Marra (3088 m above sea level). The climate is tropical with high temperatures and a rainy season from April to November. The vegetation ranges from deserts and semi-deserts in the north to thorn bush savannas and dry savannas to wet savannas in the south. Despite numerous problems, the wildlife, including bird life, is quite diverse. Numerous protected areas have been set up, but the poor population is putting great pressure on the landscape and wildlife in these areas. Dinder National Park is not only a biosphere reserve but also an important wetland and is under the protection of the Ramsar Convention. A further ten areas have been recognized by BirdLife International as IBA (Important Bid and Biodiversity Area). Most of the roads in Sudan are not paved, so that tourism in the country has great difficulties.
This E-book bird guide for "Sudan" has been built at 23.02.2025, based upon our data base and our image archive using our default settings, and saved in two formats.
Thereby it is made sure that the e-book can be displayed on virtually all devices and if applicable be printed out with a compact page size.
A free online-preview to the main section of the bird guide to Sudan - of course at today's state of the data base and the archive - is available at
Bird guides customized. There you can not only obtain the current edition of "Birds of Sudan", but also modify the form in many ways.
Cover image Brown Babbler, Photo: W.J.Daunicht
Primary language English, secondary languages German, French, Spanish, Japanese, and Chinese.
All 835 species are illustrated. In addition, links to HD videos of 193 bird species (1h 56m 47s) and audios of 66 bird species (35m 39s) are included. The assessment of the global conservation status of bird species uses the criteria of the Red List (IUCN) 2012.
The scientific system follows Clements et al. 2017.
An index, name registers in all selected languages and a scientific name register, all completely linked.
PDF E-book in page-based format A5: 297 pages, 43.47 MiB.
ePub E-book in flowable format for all devices with ePub reader: 37.57 MiB.
A paperback version of this bird guide is available from Amazon (ISBN: 9798364954794).
Also you can obtain a Kindle edition from Amazon (ASIN: B0BN2QY3QY).
© Wolfgang J. Daunicht 2025
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