|
Number of birds endemic to India by sites.
Endemic bird areas in India with the list of restricted range bird species
found in them:
Source: www.bnhs.org
1. Western Ghats
|
1. |
Nilgiri Wood Pigeon |
Columba elphinstoni |
|
8. |
Blue-winged Parakeet |
Psittacula columboides |
|
9. |
Malabar Grey-Hornbill |
Ocyceros griseus |
|
10. |
Nilgiri Pipit |
Anthus nlghiriensis |
|
11. |
Grey-headed Bulbul |
Pycnonotus priocephalus |
|
12. |
Black-and-Orange Flycatcher |
Ficedula nigrorufa |
|
13. |
Broad-tailed Grassbird |
Schoenicola platyura |
|
14. |
Small Sunbird |
Nectarinia minima |
|
15. |
Grey-breasted Laughing thrush |
Garrulax jerdoni |
|
16. |
Nilgiri Flycatcher |
Eumyias albicaudata |
|
17. |
Indian Rufous Babbler |
Turdoides subrufus |
|
18. |
Nilgiri Laughingthrush |
Garrulax cachinnans |
|
19. |
White-bellied Blue Flycatcher |
Cyornis pallipes |
|
20. |
White-bellied Shortwing |
Brachypteryx major |
|
21. |
White-bellied Treepie |
Dendrocitta leucogastra |
|
22. |
Wynaad Laughingthrush |
Garrulax delesserti |
2.
Andaman Islands
|
1. |
Andaman Serpent Eagle |
Spilornis elgini |
|
2. |
Nicobar Megapode |
Megapodius nicobariensis |
|
3. |
Andaman Crake |
Rallina canningi |
|
4. |
Andaman Wood Pigeon |
Columba palumboides |
|
5. |
Andaman Cuckoo-dove |
Macropygia rufipennis |
|
6. |
Andaman Hawk-owl |
Ninox affinis |
|
7. |
Narcondam Hornbill |
Aceros narcondami |
|
8. |
Andaman Black Woodpecker |
Dryocopus hodgei |
|
9. |
Andaman Drongo |
Dicrurus andamensis |
|
10. |
Andaman Treepie |
Dendrocitta bayleyi |
|
11. |
White-headed Starling |
Sturnus erythropygius |
3.
Nicobar Islands
|
1. |
Nicobar Serpent-eagle |
Spilornis minimus |
|
2. |
Nicobar Sparrow hawk |
Accipiter butleri |
|
3. |
Nicobar Megapode |
Megapodius nicobariensis |
|
4. |
Andaman Wood Pigeon |
Columba palumboides |
|
5. |
Andaman Cuckoo-dove |
Macropygia rufipennis |
|
7. |
Nicobar Parakeet |
Psittacula caniceps |
|
8. |
Andaman Hawk-owl |
Ninox affinis |
|
9. |
Nicobar Bulbul |
Hypsipetes nicobariensis |
|
10. |
White-headed Starling |
Sturnus erythropygius |
4.Western Himalayas
|
1. |
Himalayan Quail |
Ophrysia superciliosa |
|
2. |
Western Tragopan |
Tragopan melanocephalus |
|
3. |
Cheer Pheasant |
Catreus wallichii |
|
4. |
Brooke’s Leaf Warbler |
Phylloscopus subviridis |
|
5. |
Kashmir Flycatcher |
Ficedula subrubra |
|
6. |
Kashmir Nuthatch |
Sitta cashmirensis |
|
7. |
Orange Bullfinch |
Pyrrhula aurantiaca |
|
8. |
Spectacled Finch |
Callacanthis burtoni |
|
9. |
White-cheeked Tit |
Aegithalos leucogenys |
|
10. |
Tytler’s Leaf Warbler |
Phylloscopus tytleri |
|
11. |
White-throated Tit |
Aegithalos niveogularis |
5.
Eastern Himalayas
|
1. |
Khasi Hills Swift |
Apus acuticauda |
|
2. |
Ward’s Trogon |
Harpactes wardi |
|
3. |
Chestnut-breasted Hill-Partridge |
Arborophila mandellii |
|
4. |
Blyth’s Tragopan |
Tragopan blythii |
|
5. |
Sclater’s Monal |
Lophophorus sclateri |
|
6. |
Beautiful Sibia |
Heterophasia pulchella |
|
7. |
Broad-billed Flycatcher Warbler |
Tickelli hodgsoni |
|
8. |
Brown-capped Laughingthrush |
Garrulax austeni |
|
9. |
Grey Sibia |
Heterophasia gracilis |
|
10. |
Hoary-throated Barwing |
Actinodura nipalensis |
|
11. |
Brown-throated Fulvetta |
Alcippe ludlowi |
|
12. |
Rufous-throated Wren-babbler |
Spaeleornis caudatus |
|
13. |
Rusty-bellied Shortwing |
Brachypteryx hyperythra |
|
14. |
Rusty-throated Wren Babbler |
Spelaeornis badeigualris |
|
15. |
Snowy-throated Babbler |
Stachyris oglei |
|
16. |
Streak-throated Barwing |
Actinodura waldeni |
|
17. |
Striped Laughingthrush |
Garrulax virgatus |
|
18. |
Tawny-breasted Wren-babbler |
Speleornis longicaudatus |
|
19. |
Wedge-billed Wren-babbler |
Sphenocichla humei |
|
20. |
White-naped Yuhina |
Yuhina bakeri |
|
21. |
Black-browed Leaf Warbler |
Phylloscopus canator |
6.
Assam Plains
|
1. |
Manipur Bush Quail |
Perdicula manipurensis |
|
2. |
Black breasted Parrotbill |
Paradoxornis flavirostris |
|
3. |
Marsh Babbler |
Pellorneum palustre |
7.
Southern Tibet
|
1. |
Giant Babax |
Babax waddelli |
Secondary Areas in India with a list of restricted range species found in
them:
1. Eastern Andhra Pradesh
|
1. |
Jerdon's Courser |
Rhinoptilus bitorquatus |
2. Southern Deccan plateau
|
1. |
Yellow-throated Bulbul |
Pycnonotus xantholaemus |
3. Indus plains
|
1. |
Sind Sparrow |
Passer pyrrhonotus |
4. Central Indian Forests
|
1. |
Forest Owlet |
Heteroglaux blewitti |
5. North Myanmar lowlands
|
1. |
Chestnut-backed Laughingthrush |
Garrlux nuchalis |
ENDEMIC BIRDS STATEWISE.
KERALA
Source: ENVIS Centre,
State of Environment of Kerala.
LITTLE CORMORANT
LOCAL NAME
: Kakkattaravu
SIZE
: Somewhat larger than the Jungle Crow, with longer neck and tail.
Field Characters : A glistening black duck-like water bird
with a longer stiff tail and slender compressed bill sharply hooked at the
tip. A small white patch on throat, and suggestion of a nuchal crest. Sexes
alike. Singly or in flocks, on or near water.Cormorants are almost
exclusively fish-eaters. They chase and capture their quarry under water,
being expert divers and submarine swimmers. Flocks sometimes hunt in concert
in the manner of pelicans. They also hunt individually. When satiated, the
birds may be seen sitting on a rock or sandbank, or on stakes or trees in or
near the water, drying themselves with outstretched wings.
Eggs- 4 or 5, long narrow ovals, bluish white in color with a chalky
texture. Average SIZE 44.8x29.0mm
INDIAN DARTER or SNAKE –BIRD
LOCAL NAME
: Chera-Kozhi

SIZE : About that of the Kite
Field Characters
: A black, cormorant-like water bird with a long and very slender S-shaped
neck, narrow head and pointed dagger bill. Back heavily streaked with
silver-grey; head and neck velvety brown; chin and throat whitish. Tail
long, stiff and wedge-shaped(almost rounded). Sexes alike. Singly or in
loose parties on tanks&c Resident. Fairly common, but not abundant. Affects
open placid streams, village tanks, and dammed reservoirs. On the last the
exposed tops of the submerged dead tress provide favorite lookout and
wing-drying posts. This is also found in Ceylon , all India , burma ,
Malaysia ,,Indochinese countries to the Phluppines. Other races occur in
America , Africa and Australia . Eggs 3 or 4, very elongated,
pale greenish blue with whitish chalky coating.
Average SIZE 52.9x33.5mm
EASTERN GREY HERON
LOCAL NAME
: Charamunti

SIZE : About the same as the Purple
Heron
Field Characters:
Like the Purple Heron but ashy grey above with white crown and neck; grayish
white below. Long black occipitai crest. Elongated white feathers on the
breast with some black streaks. A conspicuous black dotted line down the
middle of the fore neck. In the female the crest and pectoral plumes are
less developed. Solitary, on reedy marshes. Distribution outside kerala is
in Ceylon , all India , Burma , Malaysia . This race ranges from Iraq
eastward to the Philippines.The species overall is found throughout the Old
World . Eggs – almost indistinguishable from those of the Purple Heron.
Average SIZE 58.6X43.5 mm.
INDIAN LITTILE GREEN BITTERN
LOCAL NAME :
Chinna-kokku.
SIZE : About the same as, or slightly smaller than, the
Pond Heron.
Field Charaters : Like the Pond Heron in general effect but
largely blackish grey, glossy dark green and bronze-green above; ashy grey
below. Top of head and long occipital crest black, glossed with dark green.
Chin and throat white. Sexes alike. Solitary, in screwpine thickets and
brushwood near water.Resident. Not common. Low country, and to at least 2000
ft. (c. 600 m). Keeps to brushwood in and on the banks of rocky streams.
Distribution outside kerala is in Ceylon , India , Burma , Thailand , South
China , Malaysia.The species in numerous races is practically cosmopolitan.
Eggs – 3 to 5, very like the Pond Heron's. Average SIZE 39.5X29.7 mm
INDIAN POND HERON, or PADDY
BIRD
LOCAL NAME
: Kulamunti, Kulakokku.
SIZE : Slightly smaller than the
Cattle Egret. About that of a village hen.
Field Characters : An egret-like
marsh bird, largely snow-white but effectively obliterated while at rest by
a camouflaging earthy-brown mantle. In the breeding season a bunch of
filamentous maroon hair-like plumes covers the back, and a long white
occipital crest adorns the head. Sexes alike. Singly or in loose parties, at
streams, tanks and puddles. The food of the Pond Heron consists mainly of
frogs, fish, crabs and insects. Resident. Common. Low country, and up to at
least 3000 ft., c. 900 m. ( Periyar Lake and environs). Affects streams,
tanks, inundated paddy fields, flooded ditches, &c., by the coastal
backwaters as well as inland.Distribution Outside Kerala is in all India ,
Burma , Thailand , Malaysia , &c. West to the Persian Gulf . A different
race (phillipsi) in the Maldive Islands . Eggs- 3 to 5, pale greenish blue.
Average SIZE 38.0X28.5 mm.
CATTLE EGRET
LOCAL NAME
: Kalimunti 
SIZE : Same as the Little Egret. About that of the domestic
hen; lankier and more leggy.
Field Characters : Snow-white overall, very similar to the
Little Egret, with which it may sometimes be confused. But the colour of its
bill-yellow (instead of black) – is always diagnostic. In the breeding
season the head, neck and back turn a distinctive golden, orange-buff. Sexes
alike. Flocks, attending on grazing cattle. Resident (presumably).
Apparently much more abundant in Ferguson 's day than at present, but still
the commonest of all the egrets. Frequents paddy fields along the
backwaters, cultivated and fallow land, chiefly in attendance on grazing
cattle.Distribution Outside Kerala is in Ceylon, all India, Burma, Thailand,
Malaysia to the Philippines and Eastern China.The nominate race occurs in
Africa, S.Europe and W.Asia. Its food consists very largely of bluebottle
flies picked off the grass or weeds. The bird poises its bill, sways its
neck comically from side to side to get a correct aim, as it were, and jabs
at the quarry. Grasshoppers and other insects, as well as frogs and lizards,
are also eaten.Eggs – 3 to 5, pale skim-milk blue in colour, unmarked.
Average SIZE 44.1X33.6 mm.
EASTERN LARGE EGRET
LOCAL NAME:
Perumunti
SIZE: About the same as, or slightly
smaller than, the Grey Heron.
Field Characters: A large, lanky,
snow-white, heron-like marsh bird with bare blackish legs, long slender neck
and head, and pointed black or yellow bill. In the breeding season a bunch
of ornamental filamentous plumes (‘aigrettes') develops on the back, falling
over beyond the tail. No crest or breast plumes. Sexes alike. Solitary, on
marshes and tanks &c.Resident. Uncommon. Frequents waterlogged paddy
stubbles, reedy islets and mud-banks in the coastal backwaters &c.
Distribution outside kerala is in Ceylon, all India, Burma, Malaysia,
Indochinese countries to Japan and Australia Its food – insects, frogs,
fish, small reptiles, &c. – is procured in shallow water or from the
squelchy mud. Eggs – 3 to 4 , very like those of the Grey and Purple Herons,
but somewhat smaller. Average SIZE 54.0X38.6 mm.
INDIAN SMALLER EGRET
LOCAL NAME:
Cherumunti 
SIZE: Slightly smaller than the Large Egret.
Field Characters: Somewhat smaller, but otherwise very like
the Large Egret and easily confused with it. Differentiation more
satisfactory in breeding plumage, when it has decomposed ornamental plumes
on both back and breast. No crest. Sexes alike. Solitary, or in small
parties at marshes. Resident. Fairly common but not abundant. Frequents the
coastal backwaters, as well as tanks and inundated paddy cultivation inland.
Much persecuted by local shikaris and as a rule inordinately wary
everywhere. Distribution outside kerala is in Ceylon , all India , Burma ,
Malaysia , Indochinese countries to Japan and the Philippines . Average SIZE
of eggs 47.6x35.8mm.
LITTLE EGRET
LOCAL NAME:
Chinnamunti. 
SIZE: Smaller than the last. About that of a domestic
hen,with longer legs and neck.
Field Characters: A lanky snow-white marsh bird- a smaller
edition of the Large Egret. In the breeding season it develops a long
drooping crest of two narrow plumes, in addition to filamentous ornamental
feathers(airgrettes) on both breast and back. Bill black at all seasons.
Feet particoloured yellow and black. Sexes alike. Flocks, on marsh land.
Resident,Commoner that the lat two, but not abundant. Frequents the
backwaters,inundated and waterlogged cultivation, tanks,streams, &c.
Distribution outside kerala is in Ceylon , all India , Burma , Malaysia to
China and Japan . Also Europe , Africa and W. Asia . Eggs – 3 to 5, of the
usual blue-green colour. Average SIZE 44.4X31.7 mm.
INDIAN REEF HERON
LOCAL NAME:
Tiramunti 
SIZE: About that of the Little Egret.
Field Characters: General effect as of the Little Egret,
also with particoloured feet, but found in two colour phases: 1) pure white,
2) bluish slate with a white patch on throat. Occasional examples are
intermediate, being partly white and partly slaty. A backwardly drooping
crest of two narrow plumes is acquired in the breeding season.The white
phase is easily confused with the Little Egret, but its more solitary habit
and seacost habitat usually distinguish it. Sexes alike. Resident. Not
common. Frequents the coastal backwaters, keeping to the waterline on
mud-banks &c., or perched on stones or fishing stakes in shallow water.
Rarely inland; once near Coimbatore (Pillai, 1959, JBNHS 57 (1): 222).
Distribution outside kerala is in Ceylon and up along the western coast of
India to the Persian Gulf . Also the Laccadive Islands . Fish, particularly
the mud-crawler (Periopthalmus), crustaceans and molluscs are the principal
food items.
Eggs – 3 or 4, pale sea-green or blue-green, unmarked. Average SIZE
44.9X34.3 mm.
NIGHT HERON
LOCAL NAME:
Toppi-kokku, pathirakokku
SIZE: Larger than the Pond Heron; about that of the Kite.
Field Characters: A stocky egret-like bird of the same
general effect as the Pond Heron but with a stouter bill. Ashy grey abive
with glossy greenish-black back and scapulars. Crown, nape and long
occipital crest black, the last with some white feathers intermixed. Young
birds brown, streaked and speckled with rufous and dark brown-rather similar
looking when at rest to the Pond Heron in non-breeding plumage. Sexes alike.
Loose flocks, roosting in bushes by water during day; flying out to feed at
dusk with a loud raucous kwaark or wock. Resident. Not
common. Low country ( Vembanad Lake &c.). Distribution Outside Kerala is in
Ceylon , all India , Burma , Malaysia to the Philippines . Westward to N.
Africa , S. and C. Europe. The food and other habits do not differ from
those of other herons and egrets.Eggs – 4 or 5, pale sea-green. Average SIZE
49.9X35.1 mm.
OPENBILL STORK
LOCAL NAME:
Cherakokkan
SIZE: Smaller than vulture. Long legged; standing about 2
1/2 ft. (75 cm.) high. 
FIELD CHARACTERS: A small stork of grayish white or white
plumage, with black in the wings. The curious reddish black bill, with
arching mandibles leaving a narrow open gap between them, is diagnostic.
Sexes alike. Twos and threes or flocks, at tanks and marshes. Resident.
According to Ferguson (1904, JBNHS 16: 15 ) ‘very common in Travancore where
large flocks may be met with on the marshy borders of all the larger tanks
and freshwater lakes, sharing the trees for roosting with flocks of
Darters'. Since then its status in Kerala seems to have altered
considerably. It is now found only sparsely and in small numbers,
Distribution Outside Kerala is in Ceylon , all India , Assam , Burma ,
Thailand and Cambodia . It is apparently adapted in some way to deal with
the thick hard shells of the large Pila snails found on marshes, the soft
body and viscera of which form such an important food item of this species.
It also eats frogs, crabs, large insects, &c.eggs – 2 to 4 , sullied white.
Average SIZE 57.9X41.2 mm.
WHITENECKED STORK
LOCAL NAME:
Karim-kokku,Karavarakuru 
SIZE: About that of the Vulture; standing about 3 ft.(90cm)
high.
FIELD CHARACTERS: A glistening metallic black strok with
conspicuous white neck and black ‘skull cap'. Lower abdomen and under tail
–coverts white. Long bare red legs. Heavy pointed black bill. Sexes alike.
Singly, pairs or parties in damp fields &c. Resident. Affects sandbanks in
rivers, damp paddy stubbles, &c, in the low country, singly or in small
parties. The edges of the newly formed dammed reservoirs in the state afford
attractive feeding. Distribution Outside Kerala is in Ceylon , all India and
Burma , Malaysia and east to Celebes . Another subspecies is found in
Africa.The birds walk about sedately and jab at their prey, which consists
mainly of frogs, fish, reptiles, water-beetles and large insects. Storks
have no voice-producing mechanism and are therefore silent birds except for
a loud clattering or clapping of the mandibles sometimes indulged in.Eggs –
3 or 4, white, obtuse ovals. Average SIZE 62.9X47.4 mm.
WHITE IBIS
LOCAL NAME:
Kashanti-kokku.
SIZE: About that of a large domestic hen.
FIELD CHARACTERS: A large white marsh bird with naked black
head and neck and long, stout, black, down curved curlew-like bill. In the
breeding season there is some slaty grey on the scapulars and inner
secondaries. Elongated white feathers appear at the base of the neck, and
the long secondaries disintegrate into ornamental plumes. Sexes alike.
Parties, on waterlogged ground. The birds were feeding by day in the paddy
fields, and roosting at night in trees on the bank of the lake. Distribution
Outside Kerala is in Ceylon , all India , Burma , Malaysia and the
Indochinese countries to S. Japan . The food, which consists of frogs,
molluscs, large insects and vegetable matter, is obtained chiefly by probing
with the bill into the soft mud, the mandibles partly open like forceps.
When feeding in shallow water the head sometimes becomes completely
submerged momentarily. Eggs – 2 to 4, bluish – or greenish white, sometimes
with delicate yellowish brown spots. Average SIZE 63.5X43.1 mm.
LESSER, or COMMON, WHISTLING
TEAL
LOCAL NAME:
Yeranda
SIZE: Smaller than the domestic duck .
FIELD CHARACTERS: A small chestnut-coloured duck,
confusable with no other of the same SIZE. The shrill wheezy whistling
notes, sea-sick, constantly uttered on the wing, and the feeble, flapping,
rail-like flight are other clues to its identity. Sexes alike. Small flocks,
on weedy tanks &c. Resident (presumably), and local migrant. Fairly common.
Low country. Distribution Outside Kerala is in Ceylon , all India , Burma ,
Malaysia , and the Indochinese countries. The birds are poor fliers, but
walk and dive well. Their food consists of snails, worms, frogs, fish, &c.,
in addition to shoots and grain. Eggs – 7 to 12, milk-white becoming
brown-stained during incubation. Average SIZE 46.9X36.8 mm.
COMMON TEAL
LOCAL NAME:
Yeranda
SIZE: Of half grown domestic duck. Slightly larger than the
Cotton Teal.
FIELD CHARACTERS: Male: penciled grayish, with chestnut
head and a broad metallic green band running backward from in front of eye
to nape, bordered above and below with whitish. A tricoloured wing-bar
black, green and buff – particularly conspicuous in flight. Female: mottled
dark and light brown, with pale underparts and black and distinctive green
wing speculum. Flocks, at reedy shallow tanks. Winter visitor. Not common.
Distribution Outside Kerala is in Summer (breeding): the Palaearctic Region.
Winter: N. Africa and practically all South Asia , including India , Burma
and Ceylon . Its food consists largely of vegetable matter.
COTTON TEAL
LOCAL NAME:
Yeranda
SIZE: Slightly larger than the Pigeon.
FIELD CHARACTERS: A diminutive wild duck, with white
predomination in the plumage. Male in breeding
dress: back glossy metallic brown with some glossy green on the wings. Face,
neck and underparts white. Top of head and a narrow collar round base of
neck blackish. In flight a broad white bar along the trailing edge of the
wings is an arresting feature. Female duller and paler, with the collar
diffuse and less defined. Non-breeding males resemble the female, but the
white wing-bar is diagnostic, small flocks, on tanks &c. According to
Ferguson (1904, JBNHS 16: 18 ) a winter visitor only, and never abundant.
Distribution Outside Kerala is in Ceylon , all India (excepting the arid NW.
parts of Pakistan ); Burma , Malaysia , S. China to Celebes.Another race is
found in N. Australia . Their food consists of shoots and grain of wild and
cultivated rice and other vegetable matter supplemented with insects,
crustacea, worms &c.Eggs – 6 to 12 , ivory white. Average SIZE 43.1X32.9 mm.
BLACKWINGED KITE
LOCAL NAME:
Velli-eriyan.
SIZE : About that of the House Crow. 
FILED CHARACTERS:
A small ashy grey and white hawk with a black line above the eyes and black
patches on the shoulders, especially prominent while atrest. The black tips
of the closed wings(primaries) extend beyond the short square-cut white
tail. In bad light the head-on silhouette of the flying bird is very like a
flying fox's. Sexes alike. Singly, in open grass jungle. Believed by
Ferguson (1904, JBNHS 15:670) to be only a winter visitor. Uncommon.
Distribution Outside Kerala is in Patchily nearly all over India and Ceylon
. Subject to local movement.
Perches on a tree-top or pole in
open country surveying the ground and puncing upon lizards , grasshoppers or
filed-mice. It is largely crepuscular and also markedly parochial, keeping
to the same locality and lookout posts day after day. His flight is sluggish
with the wing-beats reminiscent of a crow's; it is punctuated by short
spurts of sailing. The bird frequently hovers in the air like a kestrel to
espy creeping prey, parachuting down in steps for a closer view-wings open
and upraised back to back- and pouncing on the quarry. It is exceptionally
silent.Eggs-3 or 4, yellowish white, usually densely blotched with brownish
red. Average SIZE 39.3x 30.9mm
CRESTED HONEY BUZZARD
LOCAL NAME:
Ten kotichi
SIZE: About that of the Pariah Kite
FIELD CHARACTERS: Extremely variable in coloration. One of
the commonest phases is greyish brown above, pale brown below narrowly
cross-barred with white. A short blackish nuchal crest of a few elongated
feathers noticeable in profile when slightly raised. In overhead flight
rather like the Shortr-toed Eagle, but slenderer: underside of wings silvery
grey with dark markings; tail grayish with two broad blackish cross-bands.
The longer neck and slenderer head readily distinguish it from the
Short-toed Eagle. Sexes alike. Singly, in wooded country. Winter visitor.
Frequents deciduous and semi-evergreen forest. Distribution Outside Kerala
is Practically in India , Ceylon and Burma . In many areas found only as a
local migrant.
The species, with other races,
ranges from India to Siberia and Japan , including Malaysia and the
Phillippines on the south. Lives largely on honey and larvae of bees
extracted from combs on forest trees. The thick covering of short scale-like
feathers on its face is evidently a protection against stings. It also eats
small mammals, reptiles and birds and is particularly destructive to the
eggs and nestlings of the last. Eggs – usually 2, very variable in
coloration: white to pale salmon-buff,freckled, mottled or blotched with
some shade of chestnut-brown. Average SIZE 52.8X42.8 mm
COMMON PARIAN KITE
LOCAL NAME:
Chakki-parundu
SIZE: Smaller than the Vulture (about 24 inches, or 60 cm.)
FIELD CHARACTERS: A large familiar brown hawk distinguished
from all similar birds by the forked tail, particularly conspicuous in
flight. Sexes alike. Singly or gregariously, about human habitations.
Resident. Common, low country, and sparingly in the hills up to about 5000
ft. (1500 m.); occasionally higher. It is found in All India, Burma and
Ceylon . A scavenger, largely commensal on man, living mostly on garbage and
offal. It is an inveterate robber of young chickens, especially when feeding
its nest-young, and becomes a serious nuisance to poultry keepers. Also
hawks flying termites in the air.Eggs – 2 to 4 , dirty or pinkish white more
or less spotted and blotched with reddish brown. Average SIZE 52.7X42.7 mm.
BRAHMINY KITE
LOCAL NAME:
Garudan, Krishna- parundu.
SIZE: That of the Pariah Kite.
FIELD CHARACTERS: A handsome rusty red or deep chestnut
hawk with white head, neck and breast. Abdomen brown. Immature birds easily
confused with the buzzard (Buteo). Under aspect of open wings greyish with a
reddish tinge; in immature birds patchy as in the buzzard. Sexes alike.
Singly, in the neighbourhood of water-streams, tanks, inundated paddy
fields, seashore &c. Resident. Common. Low country, and occasionally to
about 3000 ft. (900 m). It is found in the entire Indian Union, both
Pakistans (excepting the north-western frontier districts), and Ceylon .
Largely a scavenger, picking up
bits of floating garbage from the surface of water. Further inland it is met
more commonly during the monsoon when rain-filled puddles and flooded
rive-fields supply an abundance of frogs and land crabs. Small fish and
snakes are also eaten. The call is a harsh, wheezy squeal. Eggs – normally
two, greyish white feebly speckled and blotched with pale dingy reddish
brown. Average SIZE 50.7x40.2 mm.
BLACK EAGLE
LOCAL NAME:
Karimparundu
SIZE: Larger than the Pariah Kite. 
FIELD CHARACTERS: A large black eagle the tips of whose
wings when at rest reach the end of the tail. In overhead flight the black
plumage, narrowly grey-barred tail-longer than in most eagles – and the
bright chrome yellow feet are diagnostic. The dark underside of the wing
contrasting with a pale patch on the primaries, the bright yellow cere and a
white patch under the eye – visible at close range – confirm its identity.
When sailing the broad wings are held above the line of the back in a wide
V, and end in upturned ‘splayed fingers' as in a vulture. Sexes alike.
Singly, on forested hills. Resident. Fairly common, but not abundant.
Evergreen and moist deciduous biotope. Foothills, and upto the highest
elevations. Forested ravines or shoals, interspersed with open grassy spurs
and hillsides, are its favourite haunts. Distribution Outside Kerala is in
Ceylon ; the Western Ghats country north to the Tapti River , including the
Nilgiris, Palnis and associated hills. Also the Shevaroys. The Satpuras and
other hills in Madhya Pradesh, Andhra, Bihar , Orissa, W. Bengal and E.
Pakistan . The Himalayas from W. Pakistan to eastern Assam . Burma ;
Thailand ; Malaysia to Celebes . Its food consists of frogs, lizards and
large insects. Birds, even of the SIZE of junglefowl, are often killed and
nests are habitually robbed of their contents, both eggs and young. Egg-
normally a singleton, handsome, whitish to pinkish in ground colour densely
and finely stippled with pale brick –red. Average SIZE 62.7x49.9 mm.
WHITEBREASTED WATERHEN
LOCAL NAME:
Kula-kozhi
SIZE: About that of the Partridge
FIELD CHARACTERS: A familiar slaty grey, stub-tailed,
skulking marsh bird with prominent white face,
supercilia, throat, breast and middle of abdomen, and rusty red under the
tail. Sexes alike. Singly, about thickets on waterlogged ground. Resident.
Fairly common. Chiefly low country but upto at least 3000 ft. (c. 900 m.) –
Periyar Lake environs. Affects Pandanus brakes and marginal vegetation in
swamps and inundated paddy fields. Also the neighbourhood of homestead along
the coastal backwaters.Distribution Outside Kerala is in Ceylon and
peninsular India north to about lat. 20 0 N. North India , Assam and Burma
are inhabited by the race chinensis.
Other races extend the species to
Malaysia , southern China , the Philippines and Formosa .. Silent except
during the monsoon months when breeding, when it becomes particularly noisy.
Its food consisit of insects, worms, molluscs, grain and shoots of paddy and
marsh plants. Eggs – 6 o r 7, cream or pinkish white streaked and blotched
with reddish brown. Average SIZE 39.5X30.0mm
The Brozewinged Jacana
LOCAL NAME:
Eetkili-kalam,Thamarakozhi
SIZE: About that of the Partridge
A leggy swamp bird, something like the moorhen, with glossy black head and
breast, metallic greenish bronze back and wings, and chestnut-red stub tail.
A broad white stripe from the eye to the nape. Sexes alike. Young birds
chiefly whitish, ruffoous and brown. The outstanding feature of the
Jacanas-this species and the next is their absurdly elongated spider like
toes. Resident. Not common, but frequent.Its food consists of seeds and
shoots of water-plants, as well as insects and molluscs. Eggs-normally 4,
very glossy and handsome, bronze-brown with an irregular network of dark
brown scrawls. Average SIZE 36.4x25.1mm. The female is polyandrous. The male
incubates the eggs and looks after the young.
PHEASANT-TAILED JACANA
LOCAL NAME:
Thamara –Kozhi,Valan thamarakozhi
SIZE: about that of the Partdirge, excluding the long
sickle-shaped tail 
In breeding plumage a striking white and chocolate-brown rail-like marsh
bird with enormous spidery feet and sickle shaped ‘pheasant' tail. Face and
foreneck white; hindneck pale golden yellow. In flight the large amount of
white in the plumage and the pointed downcurved tail are pointers to its
identity. In non-breeding plumage chiefly pale brown and white, with a black
neckle on upper breast, and minus the long tail. Sexes alike. Resident,
presumably. They are distributed outside Kerala in Ceylon and practically
all India. , Assam and Murma.Eastward to Malaysia ,S.China and Philippines
.
Travancore Pied Kingfisher
LOCAL NAME:
Pulli-ponman, Pulli meenkothi
SIZE : Between the Myna and the Pigeon
A speckled and barred black-and-white kingfisher with the typical stout
dagger-shaped bill(black). Forehead, crown and nuchal crest black,finely
streaked with white. Supercilium and collar on hindneck white. A broad black
streak through eye to ear-coverts. Underparts white with a double black
gorget across breast in the male. In the female the lower gorget is wanting
and the upper broken in the middle. Resident. Common. Low country. Keeps to
the coastal backwaters and to the larger placid streams with deep rock pools
here and there, north to about Kozhikode . Nesting Season-evidently between
November/December and March/April. Nest- a horizontal tunnel, 3 to 6 ft.(1
to 2 m) in length, excavated in the precipitous mud bank of a stream or
river. It terminated in a widened egg-chamber, unlined but almost invariably
littered with cast-up fish bones. Eggs- 5 or 6, pure white, glossy, roundish
ovals. Average SIZE 29.9x21.4mm.
Chestnut-Headed Bee-Eater
LOCAL NAME:
Veli-Tatta,Chemban velitatta
SIZE: About the same as the Small Green Bee-eater
(=Sparrow)
Like the small Green Bee-eater but lacking the elongated pin-feathers in
tail and with the whole crown, hindneck and back chestnut. Rump pale blue.
Chin, Throat and sides of neck pale yellow; a black-bordered chestnut gorget
across lower throat. Sexes alike.
Resident. Decidous and
semi-evergreen biotope. It is also found in Ceylon, south-west India north
to about Belgaum; Himalayan tarai and bhabar form Dehra Dun to E.Assam,
Orissa; E.Bengal. Rare in the central and eatern parts of the peninsula. An
endemic race andamanensis in the Andaman Is.Neasting:Season-February/March
and perhaps later. Nest- a tunnel dug in a sandy bank of a nullah or stream
in well wooded country. Eggs 4 or 5, pure white roundish ovals with a glossy
texture. Average SIZE 21.7x19.0mm.
Malabar Grey Hornbill
LOCAL NAME:
Kozhi –Vezhambal
SIZE: About that of the Kite 
A plain brownish slaty-grey hornbill without any casque on its bill.
Wing-quills and tail black, the latter with broad white tips to the two
central pairs of feathers. Throat and breast streaked with whitish. Sexes
almost alike (see colours of bill). Resident. Common. Affects evergreen and
moist decisuous biotope from the low country (eg. Thattakad, c.200ft., or
60m) to about 4000ft(1200m) in the hills. Lofty shade-trees in cardamom
shoals with a sprinkling of wild figs(Ficus) are favoaurite haunts). Goes
about in parties of 5 or 6. Larger flocks congregate to feed on fruiting
trees in the usual frugivorous company of green pigeons, grackles and
others. Nesting: Season-January to early April, most eggs being found in
February. Nest and nesting habits as of the familiy(see under Great Indian
Hornbill). Eggs-usually 3, sometimes 4, white but becoming discloured in
incubation. Average SIZE 41.4x30.0
Malabar PiedHornbill
LOCAL NAME:
Vezhambal,Ponden vezhambal 
SIZE: Larger than the Grey Hornbill. Between the Kite and
the Vulture.
Easily differentiated from the Great Indian Hornbill (next) by its smaller
SIZE, black neck and white underparts. Tail white with the central pair of
feathers black. Casque or helmet high, narrow and sharp-ridged, ending in a
single point. Female like the male except in the coloration of the soft
parts (see below). Noisy flocks, in lofty tree-tops. Resident. Uncommon.
Affects evergreen and moist deciduous forest along the foot of the hills,
e.g., Thattakad, Amarambalam (Malabar district). It is also found in Ceylon
; Western Ghats north to about Ratnagiri; the former Hyderabad state, Madhya
Pradesh, Bihar , Orissa. Arboreal and mainly frugivorous. Eggs are White in
colour becoming brown-stained as incubation proceeds. Average SIZE about
55X38 mm.
Great Indian Hornbill
LOCAL NAME:
Malamuzhalkki (mountain – shaking), Vezhambal, Kompan vezhambal.
SIZE: About that of the Vulture.
A large pied bird with enormous, stout, yellow and black horn-shaped bill,
surmounted by a cumbersome- looking
casque. Viewed from the front this is broadly U-shaped. Face black; neck and
tail white, the last comparatively long and rounded and with a broad black
subterminal band. Wings black with two white bars in each, especially
conspicuous in flight. Back and underparts black. Lower abdomen, upper and
under tail-coverts white. Sexes nearly alike. Pairs or parties, in tall
trees, or in noisy flight over forest. Resident. Common in evergreen forest
biotope. It is also found in Throughout the Western Ghats north to about
Khandala; Himalayas from Kumaon to eastern Assam , and E. Pakistan . Usually
met with in pairs or parties of 3 to 5. Diet largely frugivorous, but also
eats small mammals, lizards and snakes. The birds have a regular
time-schedule over fixed routes to and from their feeding and roosting
places, which is followed punctually day after day. Their deep harsh grunts,
roars or barks, and loud resonant call tok-tok &c., reverberate in the
forest-clad valleys and are responsible for their Malayali name. The flight,
slow and heavy, is accomplished by deliberate beats of the broad wings, the
tips of the primaries upturned, and is punctuated by occasional short glides
Nesting: Season – February,
March, April. Nest – an unlined natural hollow in a large poon (Calophyllum
tomentosum) or other forest tree, usually between 50 and 75 ft. (15 and 23
m.) from the ground. The same site is used year after year. The entrance is
walled up with a plaster composed chiefly of the bird's dung, the flat sides
of the bill serving as a trowel. Only a narrow slit is left through which
the male feeds his mate while she is sitting on the eggs. The female moults
her flight-feathers during this period of incarceration. After the young
hatch out the wall is broken down; she releases herself and thereafter
assists in foraging for the squabs. The wall is built up again for
protection of the young till they are able to fly. Eggs – 1 or 2, rarely 3,
white when laid but soon becoming discoloured through contact with the wood.
Average SIZE: 65.1X46.3 mm. (Fauna).
Malabar Crimsonthroated Barbet
LOCAL NAME:Alkili
SIZE: Same as the Coppersmith Barbet; slightly larger than
the Sparrow.
Differs from the Coppersmith (nest) in having a patch below the eye, a spot
on the cheek, and the chin, throat and foreneck crimson in addition the
forehead and fore-crown. Upper breast black with crimson apical streaks.
Sexes alike. Singly, pairs or loose parties, on fruiting trees in
forest.Resident. Common but local. Foothills and up to about 4000ft; or
1200m. restricted to evergreen biotope It is also found in Western coastal
India north to about Goa including Nilgiris, Coorg, Wayanad and W.Mysore.
Nesting:Season-January to March.
Nest and eggs indistinguishable from those of the soppersmith. Average SIZE
of eggs about 24.7x17.7mm.
CRIMSONBREASTED, or COPPERSMITH
BARBET
LOCAL NAME:
Chempukotti.
SIZE: Slightly larger and dumpier than the House Sparrow
A heavy-billed grass-green bird with yellow throat, crimson breast and
forehead, and green-streaked yellow underparts. Short, square-cut tail
appearing distinctly triangular in overhead flight. Sexes alike. Singly or
loose parties , on banyan and papal trees in fruit. Resident. Fairly common.
Deciduous low country, normally under about 500 ft(150m). Occasionally up to
1500ft, and exceptionally to 3500ft. affects lightly wooded terrain about
cultivation, groves of trees near villages and wooded compounds in towns. It
is also found in Ceylon and practically all India .Arboreal and frugivorous.
When calling, the head is bobbed from side to side, producing a curious
ventriloquistic effect. Combined with the assimilative coloration of the
bird, this makes it difficult to locate the vocalist amongst the green
foliage.
Nesting: Season-February to
April. Nest-the usual hole in somerotten softwood branch, such as of a Coral
or Drumstick tree. Eggs-usually 3, glossless pure white, unmarked. Average
SIZE 25.0x17.7mm.Both sexes share in excavating the nest-hole, incubation,
and care of the young.
Malabar Great Black Woodpecker
LOCAL NAME
: Kakka maramkoti
SIZE : About that of the House Crow.
A magnificent large black woodpecker with conspicuous white rump, and white
underparts from breast down. Male with brilliant crimson forehead, crown,
nuchal crest and cheeks. In female crimson confined to nape only. Singly or
pairs, in large trees forest. Resident. Fairly common locally. Evergreen and
moist deciduous biotope. Foothills and upto about 3500 ft. (1050 m).
Caradamom shoals with their lofty natural shade-trees, well-shaded tea and
coffee plantations, and secondary semi-evergreen jungle intermixed with
bamboo are its favourite haunts. It is also found in The strip of country
along the Western Ghats including the Nilgiris and Western Mysore , north to
the Tapti River . Also obtained recently in eastern Madhya Pradesh (Salim
Ali, 1951, JBNHS 49 : 787), so presumably extends along the Satpura mountain
trend in the same way as the Heartpotted Woodpecker (q.v.). Absent in Ceylon
. Its food consists largely of the grubs of wood-boring beetles and pupae of
white ants.Nesting: Season – principally January to March. Nest – usually
excavated in rotten tree-trunks at heights of 25 to 50 feet (7.5 to 15 m.)
from the ground. The entrance-hole is about 6 inches, or 15 cm., in
diameter, the hollow itself being about 2 feet (60 cm.) deep. Eggs-normally
2, sometimes 3 or 4,white broad ovals. SIZE about 35.5X23.5 mm.
Heartspotted woodpecker
LOCAL NAME
: Pulli maramkoti
SIZE: Between the Sparrow and the Myna.
A dainty little black and buff woodpecker with short very slender neck and
large crested head, and a curiously short and broad rounded tail. Male :
Back black with conspicuous heart-shaped buff spots on the upper side of the
wings. Rump buffy white. Chin, throat, sides of neck and base of hindneck
buffy white. Underparts dark olive and black. Forhead, crown and crest
black, the first two minutely speckled with white. Female : differs in
having the forehead and anterior crown buffy white, and more buffy white on
the wings. Widely separated pairs, in tree forest. Resident. Fairly common.
Evergreen and moist deciduous biotope. It is also found in The Western Ghats
to their northern most limit, near the Tapti River , including the Nilgiris,
western Mysore , Kanara, &c. Has also been recorded from Chanda, and
obtained in eastern Madhya Pradesh and Orissa, indicating that its
distribution stretches unbroken across the peninsula along the Satpura
mountain trend. Beyond, it occurs in Assam , Burma , Thailand , Annam ,
Cochin , China and Malaysia . Absent in Ceylon.Typical. Its call is a
characteristic pleasant trill consisting of a quick-repeated twee, twee-sharp
but loud-up to 7 or 8 times. Nesting : Season – November to April. Nest – a
hole made in a dead branch usually at great heights (uptp 40 ft. or 12 m.)
from the ground. Eggs – 3, white, unmarked. Average SIZE 23.5X18.6 mm.
Blackbacked woodpecker
LOCAL NAME:
Maramkoti
Crown and crest crimson in male; golden yellow in female. Back and tail
black. Sides of hindneck and middle of upper back white, joining to form a
prominent white V. Upperparts of wings golden olive. Cheeks, chin, throat
and foreneck fulvous white with five narrow longitudinal black streaks. When
only the head and neck of the bird are visible, this striped pattern on the
throat is diagnostic. Underparts buffy white, the feathers edged with black
and forming a bold scaly pattern on the breast. Singly or pairs, in open
tree forest.resident.uncommon and local. Decidous and semi evergreen
biotope. It is also found in lower Nilgiris, Mysore and greater part sof
peninsular and continental India northto the Himalayan foothills. Nesting
:season season – December to March. Nes- the usual hole cut into the stem of
a tree, 8 to 20 ft from the ground. Eggs – nearly always a singleton, white
and unmarked. Average SIZE 31.2 X24.1mm
Indian Oriole
LOCAL NAME:
Manjakkili
Bright golden yellow with black in wings and tail, and a conspicuous black
streak from the lores backward through the eye. Female and young male duller
and greener, with underparts whiter and streaked with dull brown. Singly or
pairs, in wooded country. Arboreal streaked with dull brown. Singly or
pairs, in wooded country. Arboreal. Partly resident largly local migrant.
Frequents open secondary forest either decxidous or with a mixture of
evergreen. It is also found in all India from Kashmir to Kanayakuamri and
from Baluchistan to Bengal . Not cylone. Entirely arboreal. Keeps to the
foliage canopy of tree but occasionally descends to low bushes such as
lantana when in ripe fruit.
Bladck Drongo
LOCAL NAME:
Kakka-tampuratti,Anaranchi
A glossy jet black bird with long deeply forked tail. Sexes alike. Singly,
on telegraph wires &c., in cultivated country.
Resident. Common. Deciduous low country under 500 ft. (c. 150 m) Affects
open fallow and grazing land, and compounds in towns and villages. Very
partial to the jack-fruit, cashew and coconut gardens surrounding homesteads
along the backwaters, and the dyked paddy cultivation in this neighbourhood.
It is also found in Peninsular India south of the Indo-Gangetic plain.
Northern India and the Lower Himalayas together with Assam are occupied by
the race albirictus, and Ceylon by minor.Single birds commonly seen perched
on telegraph wires, dead trees, fence-posts and the like keeping a sharp
look-out for grasshoppers and other insects and pouncing on them on the
ground or capturing them in the air. If too large to be swallowed entire,
the victim is held under foot and torn to pieces with the sharp hook-tipped
bill. Their diet is entirely insectivorous; they do considerable good to
agriculture by the large quantities of injurious pests they destroy. They
have a number of harsh challenging calls, some closely resembling those of
Shikra hawk. The birds become particularly noisy at the breeding season,
when they frequently indulge in scolding duets, trios and quartets. Nesting:
Season – March to June/July. Nest – a flimsy-bottomed cup of fine twigs,
grasses and fibres loosely cemented together with cobwebs. Placed in a fork,
usually near the extremity of a horizontal branch, or up in the head of a
palm at the base of a leaf stalk, 20 to 30 ft. (c. 6 to 9 m) from the
ground. A tree standing by itself in the midst of open cultivation and
commanding a good view of the surroundings is preferred. Eggs – 3 to 5,
variable in colour and markings, the most common type being whitish with
brownish red spots. Average SIZE 25.5X19.0 mm. (Fauna).
KARNATAKA
The maximum
number of endemic birds in Karnataka are found along the Western Ghats. The
following is some of the birds of endemic species in Karnataka:
Nilgiri Wood-Pigeon (Columba
elphinstonii)
Bluewinged or Malabar parakeet (Psittacula
columboides)
Whitebellied treepie (Dendrocitta
leucogastra)
Grey-headed Bulbul (Pycnonotus
priocephalus)
Rufous Babbler (Turdoides
subrufus)
Rufousvented / Wayanad Laughing Thrush (Garrulax
delesserti)
Whitebreasted / Grey-breasted Laughing Thrush (Garrulax
jerdoni)
Black and orange / Black and rufous flycatcher (Muscicapa
nigrorufa)
White-bellied Blue flycatcher (Muscicapa
pallipes)
Nilgiri flycatcher (Muscicapa
albicaudata)
Broad-tailed Grasswarbler / Grassbird (Schoenicola
platyura)
Rufous-bellied / White-bellied Shortwing (Brachypteryx
major)
Nilgiri Pipit (Anthus
nilghiriensis)
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