The dusky turtle dove or pink-breasted turtle dove (Streptopelia lugens) is a species of bird in the family Columbidae.
The dusky turtle dove is a very dark or slaty gray dove, generally 28âÂÂ30 centimeters long and 120âÂÂ205 grams.
It has a gray face slightly paler than the body, conspicuous black patches on sides of the neck, and wing coverts and tertials with pale brown or rufous edges. Its eye is orange or orange-yellow with a purplish eye-ring. Its bill is purplish slate-gray. Its legs are red. Juvenile birds are paler and browner than adults.
The dusky turtle dove is found in East Africa and South Arabia: Eritrea, Somalia, southern Sudan, Ethiopia, Uganda, Tanzania, Malawi, Burundi, Democratic Republic of the Congo, Yemen (disjunctive population), and southern Saudi Arabia (disjunctive population).
It inhabits the Afrotropical Highlands Biome: in montane forest, forest edge, and woodland garden, between 1,800 and 3,200 meters in elevation.
The dusky turtle doveâÂÂs diet consists of seeds, insects, and mollusks, foraged from the ground. It is active during the day (diurnal) and is usually solitary or in a small group (up to 10).
The dusky turtle dove is socially monogamous. The female probably builds the nest, a loose platform of twigs lined with rootlets, usually in a tree, often a juniper, 2-3 meters above the ground. The clutch is usually 2 eggs. Both male and female incubate the eggs (20 days) and tend the nestlings (possibly 14âÂÂ16 days).