Sunday, 9 August 2020

Relief of a surprise

 

Relief of a surprise

Golden Langur!!!

Relieving!!!

Species: Gee's Golden Langur

IUCN Redlist Status: Endangered

Population Trend: 6500 and decreasing

Clicked on: Mar 2018

In: Sonapur, Digaru, Assam

Gear: Nikon D7200

Focal Length : 92 mm (35mm equivalent : 138mm)

   Well well well..they are supposedly found only in western Assam (between the Manas River in the east, Sankosh in the west and Brahmaputra in the south along the Indo-Bhutan border) and the foothills of Black Mountain.

Range of Golden Langur (courtesy IUCN)


   Also reportedly there were two pockets of introduced populations.  One, on the Umananda Temple Island in Guwahati the second some where close to Silchar.

   I visited Umananda temple hoping to see them, but we reached there only by dusk and were unable to see them.

   Totally unexpectedly, clicked these Langurs frolicking around on a forested hillock close to Sonapur (about 25 kms southeast of Guwahati and 14 kms southwest of Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary).

   Only on seeing the images on computer did I realize that these were not the ordinary Grey Langur which I had presumed them to be.

#geesgoldenlangur #goldenlangur #endangered #endemic #newhabitatalert #nikon #d7200 #nikond7200 #wwfindia

Sunday, 26 July 2020

You may now kiss the bride


You may now kiss the bride

Name:  Oriental Pied Hornbill / Indian Pied Hornbill
Clicked:  Jan of 2016
In: Duars
Range: India (North, East and Northeast) and South East Asia

   Hornbills are mostly monogamous and have a pretty well laid out protocols for domestic life. For egg laying, till hatching and thereafter till the young ones grow up big enough to fledge, the females seals herself up in a tree cavity with just a small vertical slit left open. The male transfers the food for mother and kids from this slit.

   Here a prospective couple of Oriental Pied Hornbills are seen indulging in a courtship behaviour, which is a probably a practice run of the days to come...

#Hornbill #Oriental Pied Hornbill #Nikon D700 #Birds #Duar #Courtship #birdphotography #birdsofindia #hornbillwatch

Tuesday, 14 April 2020

Collared Kingfisher




Name:   Collared Kingfisher
Subspecies:   T.c. davisoni
Mode:   Bird
Location: Sundarban Delta, India

   Collared kingfisher is a magnificent bird. I captured it in Sundarbans. The collared kingfisher is seen rarely. The book 'Birds of the Indian sub-continent' says that the subspecies davisoni of collared kingfisher is only found in one area and that is Andaman. So that means I have discovered a new territory of this subspecies of collared kingfisher.

   When I went to Sundarbans my father was not there with us. I had gone there with my mother, my younger brother, my friend and his mother. Our trip was of six days. We spent three days in Sundarbans. It was the second day in Sundarbans when I saw the bird. We had gone to rehabilitation center, there I saw a bird fly and sit on a tree. I did not know which bird it was, but it was looking very beautiful so I captured photos of the bird. On coming home after the trip, I first identified the bird and learnt that it was collared kingfisher. Then then I did some research about it and found that it was only found in one area of India. Then I told it to my father. He said that this bird was very rare.

   I will tell about the Sundarban trip in the next blog, till then keep reading and stay connected.


-Elder son 





#collaredkingfisher #sundarbans #habitat #mangrove #Nikon #coolpix #p610 #birds

Monday, 6 April 2020

Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 3 Part III - Drive Back



   New Post Alert...now live...'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 3 Part III - Drive Back' (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab.


Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 3 Part II - Museum and Miscellaneous



   New Post Alert...now live...'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 3 Part II - Museum and Miscellaneous' (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab.


Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 3 Part I - Misty morning in Machaan

   New Post Alert...now live...'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 3 Part I - Misty morning in Machaan' (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab.


Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 2 Part V - TIGER Kishanpur


   New Post Alert...now live...'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 2 Part V - TIGER Kishanpur' (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab.


Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 2 Part IV - Machaan at Jhadi Taal, Kishanpur

   New Post Alert...now live...'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 2 Part IV - Machaan at Jhadi Taal, Kishanpur (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab.


Sunday, 5 April 2020

Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 2 Part III - The Drive to Kishanpur

   New Post Alert...now live...'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 2 Part III - The Drive to Kishanpur' (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab.


Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 2 Part II - The Machan

   New Post Alert...now live...'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 2 Part II - The Machan' (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab.


Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 2 Part I - The Morning Safari


   New Post Alert...now live...'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 2 Part I - The Morning Safari' (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab.



Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 1 Part II - The Evening Safari

   New Post Alert...now live...'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 1 Part II - The Evening Safari' (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab.



Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 1 Part I - Reaching Dudhwa

   New Post Alert...now live...'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa : Day 1 Part I - Reaching Dudhwa' (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab



Dudhwa : Some Basic Info

   New Post Alert...now live...'Dudhwa : Some Basic Info' (click here) or access the complete Dudhwa travelogue under the travelogue tab



Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa National Park

   

   ๐Ÿ‘‰Click to proceed to the travelogue of 'Our Weekend Trip to Dudhwa' or find it under the tab of Travelogues !!!



Thursday, 23 January 2020

Variable Wheatear


Variable Wheatear


Clicked : February of 2006
In: Western Rajasthan

   Continuing with birds of desert.

   The Variable Wheatear is a bird of arid and semi-arid region, and is locally abundant in barren rocky areas, sand dunes with scrub vegetation, cultivation, ravines, outside villages and nomadic encampments.


Range Variable Wheatear


#birds #birdsofindia #birdphotography #fujifilm #variablewheatear #birdsofdesert





Wednesday, 22 January 2020

Saker Falcon


Saker Falcon
IUCN Status: Endangered (Threatened)

Clicked: February of 2006
In: Western Rajasthan
Binomial Name: Falco cherrug
IUCN Status: Endangered (Threatened)

   Continuing with the desert birds series. I had clicked this picture long long back, about 14 years ago, though had narrowed it down to some kind of falcon, but was had not been able to identify it further. The image is of pretty poor quality as it is cropped from a mere 5 MP bridgecam, and serves as a record shot at best.

   And only yesterday, I saw a picture on a birding group in fb, of Saker Falcon in Sambhar Salt Lake. I had learnt over the past years that the Saker is an endangered bird, but seeing that image, brought back to mind this pic which I had clicked long back, and voila on cross checking with the various references now available this turned out to be the Saker (in my opinion, please comment and correct me if wrong). I differentiated it from the smaller falcons based on its larger size and from juvenile Laggar, juvenile Peregrine and juvenile Barbary Falcons based on its tail extending noticeably beyond closed wings and reconfirmed it by comparing images on the internet of these probable contenders...

   Now what makes the Saker Falcon unique?

  The Saker Falcon (Falco cherrug) is a large and spectacular bird of prey. Due to its prowess as a hunter, it has been prized by humans for centuries, particularly by falconers in the Gulf Region. Over recent decades wild populations of the Saker Falcon have declined dramatically. 

   The Saker falcon has been used in falconry for thousands of years, and is a highly regarded falconry bird. Swift and powerful, it is effective against medium and large game bird species. In recent years it is possible that hybrids of saker falcons and peregrine falcons have been developed in order to provide falconers a bird with greater size and horizontal speed than the peregrine and with greater propensity for diving stoops on game than the saker.

   The Saker is the National Bird of Mongolia. Also, the national bird of Hungary, the mythical Turul, was probably a saker falcon.

   Why has the Saker Falcon been categorised as Endangered?


"This species has been uplisted to Endangered because a revised population trend analysis indicates that it may be undergoing a very rapid decline. This negative trend is a result of a range of anthropogenic factors including electrocution on power lines, unsustainable capture for the falconry trade, as well as habitat degradation and the impacts of agrochemicals, and the rate of decline appears to be particularly severe in the species's central Asian breeding grounds.''
   

Range of Saker Falcon


#birdsofindia #birds #birdphotography #fujifilm #endangered #threatened #saker #sakerfalcon #falcon #falcocherrug #birdsofprey

Tuesday, 14 January 2020

White-eared Bulbul



   Clicked: February of 2006
  In: Western Rajasthan

 Continuing with the desert birds series, when I clicked this bird, that time based on my Salim Ali Handbook, I took it to be a Himalayan Bulbul, as the name white-cheeked Bulbul was used to describe both that and this. But was pretty surprised to find it way out of its range, a bit more research then led me to classify it to myself as the 'White-eared Bulbul'. The other distinctive feature being the lack of crest. Well, now even wiki has a page for it.

 And I learnt while posting it now, that it is also, rather primarily known as the Iraqi Bulbul. 

 Well, going by its range, I guess it should rather be called the Pakistani Bulbul.๐Ÿ˜‡



#birdsofindia #birds #birdphotography #bulbul #whitecheekedbulbul #fujifilm #finepixs5600

Sunday, 5 January 2020

Asian Green bee-eater


Asian Green bee-eater

Clicked: February of 2006
In: Western Rajasthan

     Again one of my early bird shots...

     Contrary to intuitive common sense, the desert of Thar is a pretty good place for bird-watching and photography. Its surprisingly rich in bird and wildlife. And with the vegetation being sparse, spotting is easy. And to top it all, with the tree heights being generally stunted one doesn't need 'bazookas' to get decent shots.






#greenbeeeater #fujifilm #birdsofindia #birdphotography