HIMALAYAN SHRIKE BABBLER

HIMALAYAN SHRIKE BABBLER
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Hang on Studio Wall
13/04/2015
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PAKHI DEKHUN PAKHI CHINUN # 417 (Observe the Bird and recognize)..HIMALAYAN SHRIKE BABBLER ...[From a Photograph of MR.DIBYENDU ASH] ... WATERCOLOUR ...A4...2014... The Himalayan shrike-babbler (Pteruthius ripleyi) is a bird species found in the western Himalayas that belongs to the shrike-babbler group. The genus was once considered to be an aberrant Old World babbler and placed in the family Timaliidae until molecular phylogenetic studies showed them to be closely related to the vireos of the New World, leading to their addition in the family Vireonidae. Males and females have distinctive plumages, with the males being all black about with a cinnamon-rufous tertial patch and a distinctive white stripe running from behind the eye. The underside is whitish with some pinkish buff on the flanks. Females have a greyish head, lack the white stripe and have the upperparts and wings with greens, yellow and chestnut. The species is part of a cryptic species complex that was earlier considered as one species, white-browed shrike-babbler (P. flaviscapis in the broad sense) with several subspecies . The species is found in the western Himalayas from northern Pakistan and extending east through India into central Nepal and possibly further east. The call being a series of loud kewkew kwekew repeated three or four times and the song from February to June transcribed as cha-chew, cha-ca-chip. The nest is a hammock, like that of an oriole, built in a fork towards the tip of a branch high in the canopy of a tree. The clutch varies from two to four eggs which are pinkish white and speckled in purple brown, the spots merging to form a ring towards the broad end.[INFO : WIKIPEDIA]

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