The African marsh harrier has a varied diet which includes small mammals (70% of items) and adult birds, fledglings, lizards, frogs and large insects. It can sometimes consume birds up to the size of the
Red-billed teal and the
speckled pigeon. A favoured prey in some areas are doves, especially
laughing doves. African marsh harriers are not found in areas with less than in annual rainfall as wetlands are sparse in regions with less rainfall, its main prey in southern Africa, the
striped mouse Rhabdomys pumilio, is also restricted to this
isohyet. It will also feed on larger animals such as flamingo carrion left by, for example,
African fish eagles. Most prey is caught on the ground but birds and insects are often caught on the wing. Unlike many
harriers, it is monogamous and remains on the breeding territory for most of the year. In the southern Cape, birds leave for a few months post-breeding, returning in May–June. The nest is usually built in a reedbed, sometimes well above the water and two to four white eggs are laid from July to November. All eggs start out with a blue wash allowing newly laid eggs to be identified. The African marsh harrier does not form communal roosts, unlike other harriers and normally roosts solitarily. It leaves the roost early in the morning and then flies slowly over the ground. It hunts in typical harrier fashion, usually less than 10 metres above the ground, over wetlands and adjacent drier ground. ==Conservation==