Showing posts with label ebirds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ebirds. Show all posts

The scaly-breasted munia or spotted munia புள்ளிச் சில்லை (Lonchura punctulata), Chennai wetland area | Birds of Medavakkam Marshlands, Chennai city birds

புள்ளிச் சில்லை - Lonchura punctulata 

    The Scaly-breasted Munia is a small-sized bird. Attractive small songbird of grasslands, gardens, fields, and agricultural areas. Native to India and Southeast Asia, with introduced populations scattered elsewhere around the world. Typical adults dark chestnut-brown above, white below, with the fine dark scaly pattern on belly; some populations duller brown. Juveniles plain brown all over with slightly paler underparts. Typically found in small flocks, sometimes mixed with other species of munia.

The scaly-breasted munia or spotted munia (Lonchura punctulata) at Medavakkam near Annakkili Amma Research Institute (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

    In Chennai wetlands, we have observed Scaly-breasted at different times, in February 2021 the juvenile Scaly-breasted munia was seen near AARI. then we have not noticed any Scaly-breasted munia near AARI. but in June 2021 the flock of Scaly-breasted munia was crossing AARI in the evening time from west to east, in the morning also they may cross but we have not seen them. in morning time these four Scaly-breasted Munia used to visit the bush in front of AARI. 

The scaly-breasted munia or spotted munia (Lonchura punctulata) at Medavakkam near Annakkili Amma Research Institute (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

புள்ளிச் சில்லை என்பது சில்லை எனப்படும் திணைக்குருவி வகையைச் சேர்ந்த சிட்டுக்குருவி அளவிலான ஒரு பறவை. இது ஆசியாவைத் தாயகமாகக் கொண்டது. இது 1758-இல் லின்னேயசால் அறிவியல் முறைப்படி பெயரிடப்பட்டது.

The scaly-breasted munia or spotted munia (Lonchura punctulata) at Medavakkam near Annakkili Amma Research Institute (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

Scientific classification 

Kingdom:    Animalia
Phylum:           Chordata
Class:            Aves
Order:            Passeriformes
Family:            Estrildidae
Genus:            Lonchura
Species:            L. punctulata
Binomial name: Lonchura punctulata (Linnaeus, 1758)

The scaly-breasted munia or spotted munia (Lonchura punctulata) at Medavakkam near Annakkili Amma Research Institute (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)
    
        This munia eats mainly grass seeds apart from berries and small insects. They forage in flocks and communicate with soft calls and whistles. The species is highly social and may sometimes roost with other species of munias. This species is found in tropical plains and grasslands. Breeding pairs construct dome-shaped nests using grass or bamboo leaves.

The species is endemic to Asia and occurs from India and Sri Lanka east to Indonesia and the Philippines (where it is called mayang pakíng).

Cinnamon Bittern செங்குருகு (Ixobrychus cinnamomeus) Chennai wetland area | Birds of Medavakkam Marshlands, Chennai city birds



Cinnamon Bittern செங்குருகு (Ixobrychus cinnamomeus) at backyard of Annakkili Amma Research Institute (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

Cinnamon Bittern செங்குருகு (Ixobrychus cinnamomeus)

This bird was observed since March 2021, but it was very rarely seen, that too while flying away. They stay inside the bushes, if we go near to bushes they fly away... the earlier observations were from Medavakkam Lake. During those time they simply fly away and escape, I was not able to notice its characters properly hence I could not identify. This bird is very new to me so I need to check all its characters to identify it because I have never seen it before. this was happening till May 2021.

In may 2021 that miracle happened this bittern straight away reached the bush in front of our home. that is the time I could see it properly. when I saw the bill (peak) of this bird I recognized as it is a bittern, later found it was Cinnamon bittern. a couple of bitter was visiting our place to stay protected, which is the same place where Moorhen was hatched their chicks. But now White-Breasted Waterhen has occupied the place, hence after trying for two three days this bittern left that area.

Even though it was visiting nearby we could not take clear pictures because it was full of bushes, but on one day evening, we could observe a bittern in an open space. I was called by the AARI admin to take pictures and immediately I went and clicked a lot of pictures. it was giving a nice pose. for the first and last time, it didn't fly away after seeing me. it was literally seeing me by turning its neck but didn't fly. our recent observation confirms that they stay at the backside of the AARI building, where birds like Bronze-winged Jacana, The Eurasian Moorhen, White-breasted Waterhen, Grey-headed Swamphen have bred. I hope this bittern couple also will breed over there, it is in the center of wetland, filled with two Palm trees, Typha, and some thorny trees, The bush is thicker and safer except for the issues with snakes. 
Here are some pictures Cinnamon Bittern (செங்குருகு) for you to see...

Cinnamon Bittern செங்குருகு (Ixobrychus cinnamomeus) at the backyard of Annakkili Amma Research Institute (Photo Credit: Elaya Perumal)

Cinnamon Bittern செங்குருகு (Ixobrychus cinnamomeus) looking at me weirdly from the backyard of Annakkili Amma Research Institute (Photo Credit: Elaya Perumal)


யாரும் இல்லை; தானே கள்வன்;
தான் அது பொய்ப்பின், யான் எவன் செய்கோ?
தினை தாள் அன்ன சிறு பசுங் கால
ஒழுகு நீர் ஆரல் பார்க்கும்
குருகும் உண்டு, தான் மணந்த ஞான்றே.
கபிலர் (குறுந்தொகை 25)
In the above-mentioned Poem, the great poet Kabilar mentioned the characters of Bittern... 

Thank you all...

Stay Home Stay Safe

Help Nature to Recover...

The Purple Heron (Ardea purpurea) செந்நாரை | Chennai wetland area | Birds of Perumbakkam & Medavakkam Marshlands, Chennai city birds

 Purple Heron செந்நாரை

                Purple heron is one of the most confusing heron, and most similar to the grey heron. There are some noticeable differences which helps in the identification. this birds have been observed at Perumbakkam and Medavakkam wetland areas (we have not visited Pallikaranai marshland). 


 Purple Heron at Perumbakkam Marshland area (Photo Credit U Elaya Perumal)

                It is similar in appearance to the more common grey heron but is slightly smaller, more slender, and has darker plumage. It is also a more evasive bird, favoring densely vegetated habitats near water, particularly reed beds. It hunts for a range of prey including fish, rodents, frogs, and insects, either stalking them or standing waiting in ambush (source ebird).

 Purple Heron at Perumbakkam Marshland area with its prey (Photo Credit U Elaya Perumal)

                       This is shorter than the crest of the grey heron and does not exceed 140 mm (5.5 in). The sides of the head and the neck are buffish chestnut, with dark streaks and lines down either side of the whole the neck. The mantle is oily brown and the upper scapular feathers are elongated but not the lower ones. The rest of the upper parts and the tail are brownish grey. The front of the neck is paler than the sides and there are some elongated feathers at the base of the neck which are streaked with white, chestnut and black. The breast is chestnut brown, with some blackening at the side, and the belly and under-tail coverts are black. The brownish-yellow beak is long, straight and powerful, and is brighter in colour in breeding adults. The iris is yellow and the legs are brown at the front and yellowish behind (Source: Wikipedia).

 Purple Heron at Perumbakkam Marshland area with its prey (Photo Credit U Elaya Perumal)

              இது சாம்பல் நாரையை விடவும் சிறியதாகவும் இலேசாகவும் உள்ளது. இதனை சாம்பல் நாரையிடமிருந்து வேறுபடுத்திக்கட்டுவது யாதெனின் இதன் இள்ஞ்சிவப்பு நிற உடலே. வளர்ந்த பறவைகள் கருத்த பழுப்பு நிறத்தையும் கொண்டிருக்கின்றன. இவை குறுகிய வடிவிலான மஞ்சள் அலகினை உடையது. செந்நாரைக்கு உருவத்தில் மிகவும் அருகாமையில் உள்ள நாரை இவற்றை விட உருவில் பெரிய கோலியாத்து நாரை.

இவை ஆப்பிரிக்காவிலும், மத்திய மற்றும் தெற்கு ஐரோப்பாவிலும், தென் மற்றும் கிழக்கு ஆசியாவிலும் வாழ்கின்றன. எனினும் ஐரோப்பிய இனங்கள் குளிர் காலங்களில் ஆப்பிரிக்காவை நோக்கி வலசை வருகின்றன. ஆசிய இனங்களோ வடக்கும் தெற்கும் ஆசியாவிற்குள்ளேயே வலசை வருகின்றன.


The Rose-ringed Parakeet (Psittacula krameri) பச்சைக்கிளி | Chennai wetland area | Birds of Medavakkam Marshlands, Chennai city birds

The Rose-ringed Parakeet/ Ring-necked Parakeet (Psittacula krameri) locally known as Pachchai Kili (பச்சை கிளி).

The Rose-ringed Parakeet (Psittacula krameri) near Medavakkam lake (Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal)

                     In the Medavakkam Marshland area we could observe more rose-ringed parakeets. they live on the palm trees near Medavkkam lake. Every day they fly through Annakkili Amma Research Institute and also often land on backyard trees of AARI. 

The Rose-ringed Parakeet (Psittacula krameri) near AARI (Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal)

                      The ring-necked parakeet, is a medium-sized parrot in the genus Psittacula, of the family Psittacidae. It has disjunct native ranges in Africa and the Indian Subcontinent and is now introduced into many other parts of the world where feral populations have established themselves and are bred for the exotic pet trade. Even in Chennai, it is illegally traded on many pet markets, for example at Chennai Pallavaram Friday market.
                   
The Rose-ringed Parakeet (Psittacula krameri) near Medavakkam lake (Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal)

                           Vibrantly bright green parakeet, frequently found in woodland, parks, gardens, where feeds mainly in trees. Nests in cavities, including holes in buildings. Easily overlooked if quiet, as the bright green plumage blends easily with foliage. Note the very long slender tail, bright red bill; male has narrow black-and-rose neck ring. Closely resembles the larger Alexandrine Parakeet, which has a wine-red patch on each shoulder. Like other parakeets, raucous and social, often appearing in noisy groups. Native to Africa and South Asia, introduced locally in Europe and Japan (Source: ebirds).

The Rose-ringed Parakeet (Psittacula krameri) in Tanjavur (Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal)

Scientific classification

Kingdom          : Animalia
Phylum             : Chordata
Class                 : Aves
Order                : Psittaciformes
Family              : Psittaculidae
Genus               : Psittacula
Binomial name :     Psittacula krameri Scopoli, 1769

The Rose-ringed Parakeet (Psittacula krameri) in Tanjavur (Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal)

                  இக்கிளிகளின் வால் நீண்டு கூர்மையாக முடிகிறது. பச்சை நிறத்துடன், வளைந்து சிவந்த அலகும், கருப்பு இளஞ்சிவப்பு கலந்த கழுத்து வளையம் போன்ற ஆரம் உடையது. இவ்வின பெண்கிளி எல்லாவகையிலும் ஆண்கிளி போல இருந்தாலும் இந்த ஆர வளையம் இல்லாமல் இருக்கும். இப்பறவைகள் கூண்டுகளில் வைத்து வளர்க்கப்படுகின்றன. இப்பறவைகள் மனிதர்கள் சொல்லும் சொற்களைக் கேட்டு அவற்றைத் திரும்பச் சொல்லக்கூடியவை. 

The Rose-ringed Parakeet (Psittacula krameri) in Tanjavur (Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal)

 

Paddyfield Pipit (Anthus rufulus) நெல்வயல் நெட்டைக்காலி Chennai wetland area | Birds of Perumbakkam Marshlands, Chennai city birds

Paddyfield pipit
Paddyfield pipit at Perumbakkam Marshland area (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

    Perumabakkam Marshland has much grassland areas, where we could observe more than 10 paddyfield Pipit. catching them with our camera was bit difficult. there were two major issues in photography one was the bird keep on moving they don't stand still anywhere.
another major issue was the background. most of the time they were standing on the dried plant materials hence the background and bird color were almost similar and there was no color contrast to focus with my simple SLR camera. but still, I could able to get somewhat well-focused pictures which I have given here... In early March one or two days a pair of pipit were observed near Annakkili Amma Research Institute (AARI), medavakkam marshland.

Paddyfield pipit at Perumbakkam Marshland area (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

    The paddy-field pipit or Oriental Pipit (Anthus rufulus) is a small passerine bird in the pipit and wagtail family. It is a resident (non-migratory) breeder in open scrub, grassland, and cultivation in southern Asia east to the Philippines. Although among the few breeding pipits in the Asian region, identification becomes difficult in winter when several other species migrate into the region. The taxonomy of the species is complex and has undergone considerable changes (Wikipedia).

Paddyfield pipit at Perumbakkam Marshland area (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

          A sparrow-sized, resident pipit with brown plumage that varies in tones in different parts of its range. All birds have a bi-colored bill with a curve to the tip of the upper bill. The breast is streaked and the upper parts have variable amounts of streaking. Juveniles show distinct and dark mottling on the upper parts. It is common in open habitats such as wetlands, farms, fields, and even large parks. Very similar to Blyth’s and Richard’s Pipits, but relatively compact and has a more distinct eyebrow, fainter or no streaking on the back of the neck, a larger head, and a shorter tail than either Blyth’s or Richard’s. Calls include short “tsip” and “tissip” notes (ebird).

Paddyfield pipit at Perumbakkam Marshland area (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

நெல்வயல் நெட்டைக்காலி (paddyfield pipit, அல்லது Oriental pipit, (Anthus rufulus) என்பது ஒரு சிறிய பாசரிபாரம்சு பறவை ஆகும். இது வாலாட்டிக் குருவிக் குடும்பத்தைச் சேர்ந்த பறவை ஆகும். இவை ஒரு பகுதியிலேயே வாழக்கூடியன (வலசை போகாதவை) இவை திறந்த வெளிகளிலும், புல்வெளிகளிலும் வாழக்கூடியன, தெற்கு ஆசியா, கிழக்குப் பிலிப்பீன்சு போன்ற பகுதிகளில் உள்ளன. பிற மற்ற இனங்கள் ஆசியாவின் பிற பகுதியில் காணப்படுகின்றன. ஆசிய பிராந்தியத்தில் குளிர்காலத்தில் இவ்வகைப் பறவைகளை அடையாளம் காண்பது கடினமாக இருக்கும். இனங்களின் வகைப்பாட்டில் சிக்கலான மற்றும் கணிசமான மாற்றங்கள் ஏற்பட்டிருக்கின்றன.

Black Drongo (Dicrurus macrocercus) இரட்டைவால் குருவி

வெண்புருவ வாலாட்டி White-browed Wagtail 

Pied Bushchat (Saxicola caprata) புதர்ச்சிட்டு

Purple-rumped Sunbird Leptocoma zeylonica ஊதாப்பிட்டத் தேன்சிட்டு

Eurasian Moorhen Gallinula chloropus தாழைக் கோழி

Bronze winged Jacana (Metopidius indicus) தாமிர இறக்கை இலைக்கோழி

White-breasted waterhen (Amaurornis phoenicurus) வெள்ளை நெஞ்சு நீர்க்கோழி

The greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) பெரும் பூநாரை

Indian spot-billed duck (Anas poecilorhyncha) புள்ளி மூக்கு வாத்து 

The glossy ibis (Plegadis falcinellus) அன்றில் Chennai wetland area | Birds of Medavakkam Marshlands, Chennai city birds

 Read More about Glossy ibis here

Glossy ibis feeding at Medavakkam Lake on 08/05/2021 (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

Glossy ibis was less frequently observed at Medavakkam Marshland during March and April as described in our earlier post. But in the month of May, they were observed in large groups at Medvakkam lake and near Annakkili Amma Research Institute. most of the days they more than 10 in number. every day we could observe them near AARI. someday they visit in the early morning some days at mid-noon and on other days at evening time. but they are not missing to visit the backyard of AARI. In Medavakkam lake, it more than observed at AARI.

Glossy ibis feeding at Medavakkam Lake on 07/05/2021 (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

Group of Glossy ibis feeding at Medavakkam Lake on 07/05/2021 (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)



Glossy ibis feeding at Medavakkam Lake on 08/05/2021 (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

Glossy ibis feeding at Medavakkam Lake on 08/05/2021 (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

Glossy ibis feeding at Medavakkam Lake on 08/05/2021 (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

Glossy ibis feeding at Medavakkam Lake on 08/05/2021 (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

 Read More about Glossy ibis here

Black Drongo (Dicrurus macrocercus) இரட்டைவால் குருவி

வெண்புருவ வாலாட்டி White-browed Wagtail 

Pied Bushchat (Saxicola caprata) புதர்ச்சிட்டு

Purple-rumped Sunbird Leptocoma zeylonica ஊதாப்பிட்டத் தேன்சிட்டு

Eurasian Moorhen Gallinula chloropus தாழைக் கோழி

Bronze winged Jacana (Metopidius indicus) தாமிர இறக்கை இலைக்கோழி

White-breasted waterhen (Amaurornis phoenicurus) வெள்ளை நெஞ்சு நீர்க்கோழி

The greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) பெரும் பூநாரை

Indian spot-billed duck (Anas poecilorhyncha) புள்ளி மூக்கு வாத்து 

The greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) பெரும் பூநாரை Chennai Wetland Birds Perumbakkam Marshland birds || Bird watching

The greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) பெரும் பூநாரை

    Common at Perumbakkam Mashland area but have not observed at Medavakkam lake area. 

The greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal

         Distributed from Africa and southern Europe through West Asia to South Asia. Very large, with long, "coat hanger" neck, big kinked bill, and very long pinkish legs. Plumage at rest whitish with pale pink blush and some deep pink often visible on closed wings. Flies with long neck and legs extended, when deep pink-and-black wing pattern striking (ebird).


The greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal


The greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) is the most widespread and largest species of the flamingo family. It is found in Africa, the Indian subcontinent, the Middle East, and in southern Europe (wikipedia).
The greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal
The greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal

பெரும் பூநாரை (Greater Flamingo) என்பது நாரைக் குடும்பத்தைச் சேர்ந்த ஒரு பறவையாகும். இதன் அறிவியல் பெயர் பீனிகாப்டெரசு ரோசசு என்பதாகும். நம் வீடுகளில் வளரும் வாத்தின் பருமனுடைய இப்பறவைக்கு நீண்ட முடியற்ற சிவந்த கால்களும், நீண்டு வளைந்த கழுத்தும், குறுகிய வளைந்த அலகும் இருக்கும். கால் விரல்கள் வாத்துக்கு இருப்பது போலவே சவ்வினால் இணைந்திருக்கும். நிமிர்ந்து நின்றால் 1 1/2 மீட்டர் உயரம் இருக்கும். இப்பறவைகள் செந்நிறம் கலந்த வெள்ளையுடலும் கரு நிறமான இறக்கை ஓரமும் கொண்டவை. நிலத்திலும் அதிக உப்புத்தன்மை அதிகமுள்ள ஏரிகளில் கடும் வெப்பத்தையும் தாங்கி வாழும் பூநாரை, தமிழகத்திலுள்ள கோடியக்கரை வனவுயிரினங்கள், பறவைகள் உய்விடம் புகலிடத்திற்கு வரும் எண்ணற்ற பறவைகளில் மிகவும் அழகான ஒன்று. இப்பறவைகள் கூட்டம் கூட்டமாகப் பறந்து உயரச் செல்லும் காட்சி மனதைக் கவரும் தன்மை உடையது (wikipedia).

The greater flamingo (Phoenicopterus roseus) Photo credit: U Elaya Perumal

Black-winged stilt (Himantopus himantopus) நெடுங்கால் உள்ளான் Chennai Wetland Birds Perumbakkam Marshland birds || Bird watching

 Scientific classification

Kingdom:   Animalia

Phylum:           Chordata

Class:           Aves

Order:           Charadriiformes

Family:           Recurvirostridae

Genus:           Himantopus

Species:           H. himantopus

Binomial name: Himantopus himantopus (Linnaeus, 1758)

Black-winged stilt observed at Perumbakkam Marshland  (Photo Credit U Elaya Perumal)

    The Black-winged Stilt is very common in Perumbakkam marshland. we have not observed them at Medavakkam lake or near Annakkili Amma Research Institute. which makes us think that this bird is not visiting Medavakkam Marshland. The Perumbakkam marshland is a bigger area with a shallow water body which is the supporting habitat for the Black-winged Stilt. hence they reside more near Perumbakkam Marshland, the habitat is similar to Pallikaranai also, but are yet to visit Pallikaranai Marshland (The Major Marshland/wetland of Chennai)


Black-winged stilt observed at Perumbakkam Marshland  (Photo Credit U Elaya Perumal)

The black-winged stilt (Himantopus himantopus) is a widely distributed very long-legged wader in the avocet and stilt family (Recurvirostridae). The scientific name H. himantopus was formerly applied to a single, almost cosmopolitan species. It is now normally applied to the form that is widespread in Eurosiberia and Africa and which was formerly regarded as the nominate subspecies of Himantopus himantopus sensu lato. The scientific name Himantopus comes from the Greek meaning "strap foot" or "thong foot". Most sources today accept 2–4 species. It is sometimes called pied stilt, but that name is now reserved for the Australian species, Himantopus leucocephalus (Wikipedia).

Black-winged stilt observed at Perumbakkam Marshland  (Photo Credit U Elaya Perumal)

    Fairly common to locally common in warmer regions. Favors wetlands with open shallow water, often brackish; breeds on bare ground near water, often in noisy colonies. Striking and essentially unmistakable, with elegant shape, boldly pied plumage, long hot-pink legs, and long, very fine bill. Feeds by wading in the water, picking with its bill from the water surface. In-flight, long pink legs stick out far beyond the tail (ebird).

நெடுங்கால் உள்ளான் (Black-winged Stilt - Himantopus himantopus) என்பது நீண்ட கால்களைக் கொண்ட கரைப்பறவைகளுள் ஒன்றாகும். இது நீர் நிலைகளுக்கு அருகில் வாழக்கூடிய பறவை ஆகும்.

Grey Heron (Ardea cinerea) சாம்பல் நாரை Chennai Wetland Birds Medavakkam & Perumbakkam Marshland birds || Bird watching

Grey Heron (Ardea cinerea)
             These birds have been spotted in Medavakkam Lake and also in Perumbakkam Marshland. the Grey heron was occasionally spotted at Medavakkam Lake but in the Perumbakkam Marshland area, it was found with high frequency. 

Grey Heron at Perumbakkam Marshland (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

               Generally quite common and conspicuous in wetland habitats from marshes and tidal flats to small ponds, ditches, and wet fields; nests colonially in tall trees. Mainly seen as singles or in small groups, standing quietly in or at the edge of the water, less often hunting in fields. Plumage mostly gray overall, with a paler neck; the adult has a white crown, black eyebrows, and black shoulder patch. Like other herons and egrets, flies with necks pulled in to form a bulge.

Grey Heron at Perumbakkam Marshland (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

             The grey heron is a long-legged predatory wading bird of the heron family, Ardeidae, native throughout temperate Europe and Asia and also parts of Africa. It is resident in much of its range, but some populations from the more northern parts migrate southwards in autumn (Wikipedia).

Grey Heron at Perumbakkam Marshland (Photo Credit: U Elaya Perumal)

Scientific classification

Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Pelecaniformes
Family: Ardeidae
Genus: Ardea
Species: A. cinerea
Binomial name: Ardea cinerea Linnaeus, 1758

நதியன், நாராயணப் பட்சி, நரையான், கொய்யடி நாரை, கருநாரை பெருங்கொக்கு, சாம்பல்கொக்கு ஆகியவை இதன் வேறு பெயர்கள்.

Indian Pond Heron or Paddybird (Ardeola grayii) குளத்துக் கொக்கு /குருட்டுக் கொக்கு / மடையான் Chennai Wetland birds Marshland of Medavakkam

 Indian Pond Heron  or Paddybird (Ardeola grayii) குளத்துக் கொக்கு /குருட்டுக் கொக்கு

Indian Pond Heron spotted at Sivaram Avenue, Sivagami Nagar, Medavakkam, Chennai - 600 100 (Photo Credit U Elaya Perumal)


This heron is very commonly observed all around Tamil Nadu. In Chennai Marshland area also it is widely distributed. this heron has peculier name in Tamil as Kurrttu Kokku means Blind egret. I used to think in childhood days as this egret is blind. but it always fly away when i go near to that. so used to wonder why this name came. but i could sense that this bird got this namen because it always camouflouge with th environment and by standing still it avoid noticed by other animals. that could be the only reason it is called as" Kurruttu Kokku".

This bird is often noticed near to Annakkili Amma Research Institute (AARI), But it was surprise to see more than hundred individual Indian Pond heron birds at Medavakkam Lake (Medavakam eri). Eventhough the Lkae is not properly maintained or cleaned the lake is worth visiting for sighting some rare and colourfull birds. 
Indian Pond Heron at Medavakkam eri, Medavakkam, Chennai 600 100 (Photo Credit : U Elaya Perumal)

Indian Pond Heron at Medavakkam eri, Medavakkam, Chennai 600 100 (Photo Credit : U Elaya Perumal)

Indian Pond Heron at Medavakkam eri, Medavakkam, Chennai 600 100 (Photo Credit : U Elaya Perumal)

Indian Pond Heron at Medavakkam eri, Medavakkam, Chennai 600 100 (Photo Credit : U Elaya Perumal)

Indian Pond Heron at Medavakkam eri, Medavakkam, Chennai 600 100 (Photo Credit : U Elaya Perumal)

Indian Pond Heron at Medavakkam eri, Medavakkam, Chennai 600 100 (Photo Credit : U Elaya Perumal)

Indian Pond Heron at Medavakkam eri, Medavakkam, Chennai 600 100 (Photo Credit : U Elaya Perumal)

Indian Pond Heron at Medavakkam eri, Medavakkam, Chennai 600 100 (Photo Credit : U Elaya Perumal)

Indian Pond Heron at Medavakkam eri, Medavakkam, Chennai 600 100 (Photo Credit : U Elaya Perumal)


வெண்புருவ வாலாட்டி White-browed Wagtail or Large Pied Wagtail (Motacilla maderaspatensis) Chennai Wetland Birds Medavakkam Marshland birds || Bird watching

 White-browed Wagtail or Large Pied Wagtail (Motacilla maderaspatensisவெண்புருவ வாலாட்டி / வரி வாலாட்டிக் குருவி

White-browed Wagtail Photo Credit U Elaya Perumal

    This bird is not a frequent visitor to the Medavakkam Marshland, since our project started we have observed less than 10 times only. the morphology is somewhat similar to Pied Bushchat but it differs from that with a large body and long tail and an iconic white colour above the eybrow.  this bird continuously flips its tail up and down which is the reason behind the name Wagtail. A pair of White-browed Wagtail have been observed here near Annakkili Amma Research Institute between 6:30 am to 8:00 am. 


White-browed Wagtail Photo Credit U Elaya Perumal

        The white-browed wagtail or large pied wagtail (Motacilla maderaspatensis) is a medium-sized bird and is the largest member of the wagtail family. They are conspicuously patterned with black above and white below, a prominent white brow, shoulder stripe, and outer tail feathers. White-browed wagtails are native to South Asia, common near small water bodies, and have adapted to urban environments where they often nest on rooftops. The specific name is derived from the Indian city of Madras (now Chennai).



Scientific classification


Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Motacillidae
Genus: Motacilla
Species: M. maderaspatensis
Binomial name:    Motacilla maderaspatensis Gmelin, 1789





AARI World Wetland Day Quiz, 2022 conducted by AARI and Chennai Wetlands Biodiversity Blog || Publish your articles and books with us www.aaribioscience.com

 Annakkili Amma Research Institute (AARI) Chennai Wetland Biodiversity Blog wishes you all Happy World Wetland Day 2022 AARI organizes vari...