Wednesday, February 8, 2012

>Aviceda jerdoni Blyth (Jerdon's Baza)

Aviceda jerdoni Blyth (Jerdon's Baza)

Jerdon's Baza
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Aves
Order:Accipitriformes
Family:Accipitridae
Genus:Aviceda
Species:A. jerdoni
Binomial name
Aviceda jerdoni
(Blyth, 1842)
Jerdon's Baza (Aviceda jerdoni) is a moderate sized brown hawk with a thin white-tipped black crest usually held erect. It is found in South-east Asia. It inhabits foothills in the terai and is rarer in evergreen forests and tea estates.


Description

It is about 46 cm long. It is confusable with Crested Goshawk or the Crested Hawk-eagle in flight, but can be distinguished by the longer upright crest, very broad and rounded paddle-shaped wings and mostly plain and pale underparts. It has a white chin and a bold black mesial stripe.
Several subspecies are recognized within its large distribution range. These include:
  • A. j. jerdoni (Blyth, 1842) - Sikkum to Assam, Burma, Sumatra
  • A. j. ceylonensis (Legge, 1876) - South India and Sri Lanka
  • A. j. borneensis (Sharpe, 1893) - Borneo
  • A. j. magnirostris (Kaup, 1847) - Luzon, Mindanao
  • A. j. leucopias (Sharpe, 1888) - Romblon, Samar, Palawan
  • A. j. celebensis (Schlegel, 1873)


Distribution


A. j. leucopias
It is resident in the terai of North India and foothills of the Eastern Himalayas from Eastern Nepaland Bengal duars to the Assam valley, western ghats in Southern India, southern Sri Lanka,BangladeshBurmaThailandSumatraSingapore and Philippines


Habits

The bird is typically seen in pairs making aerial sallies; crest held erect. Occasionally, the birds may be seen in small family parties of 3 to 5 seen in flight near edge of forests. The birds indulge in 'soaring and undulating' display flights near the nest. Breeding season varies locally but the bird is known to breed almost the entire year with the exception of a few months around April and May. Food includes lizards, grasshoppers and other large insects. The stomach contents of a specimen collected in present day Kurseong included agamid lizard, Japalura variegata, several longicorn beetles and mantises.

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