![]() Owl: Spot Bellied Eagle Owl, Towny Fish Owl, Brown Fish Owl, Brown Wood Owl Nuthatch: White-Tailed Nuthatch, Chestnut Bellied Nuthatch.Įagle: Mountain Hawk Eagle, Palla’s Fishing Eagle, Grey Headed & Lesser fish Eagle, Serpent Eagle, Golden Eagle, Black Eagle. Partridges: Common Hill Partridge, Snow Partridge.įlycatcher: Asian Paradise Flycatcher, Rufous Gorgeted Flycatcher, Taiga Flycatcher, Verditer Flycatcher, Grey Headed Flycatcher, Rusty Tailed Flycatcher, Ultramarine Flycatcher, Rufous Bellied Niltava, Small Niltava & Himalayan Bluetail. Warbler: Spotted Bush Warbler, Ashy-throated Warbler, Grey Headed Warblers, Whistlers Warbler, Hume’s Warbler, Black Faced Warblers, Common Tailorbird, Oriental White-eye, Golden Spectacled Warbler. Parakeets: Red-breasted Parakeet, Slaty-Headed Parakeet, Plum-headed Parakeet, Rose Ringed Parakeets.īabbler: Lineated Babblers, Puff Throated Babbler, Black-Chinned Babblerīarbet: Blue-throated Barbet, Great Barbet, Brown-Headed Barbet. Pheasant: Cheer Pheasant, Kalij Pheasant, Koklass Pheasant. Woodpecker: Great Slaty woodpecker, Large Scaly Bellied green woodpecker, Rufous Woodpecker, Scaly Bellied Woodpecker, Blacknaped Green Woodpecker, Lesser Golden Backed Woodpeckers, Himalayan Pied Woodpeckers. Thrushes: Greater long bill thrush, Chestnut-bellied Rock Thrush, Blue Whistling Thrush, Black-Throated Thrush, Grey Winged Blackbird, White Collared Blackbird. Laughing Thrushes: White-crested Laughing Thrush, Spotted Laughing Thrush, White-throated Laughing Thrush, Striated Laughing Thrush, Streaked Laughing Thrush, Variegated Laughing Thrush. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona.The most common bird’s species found in Uttarakhand are: ![]() Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive. In: del Hoyo, J., Elliott, A., Sargatal, J., Christie, D.A. Orange-flanked Bush-robin ( Tarsiger cyanurus). ^ "Orange-flanked Bush-robin (Tarsiger cyanurus)".^ BirdLife species factsheet for Tarsiger rufilatus.^ Grimmett, Richard Inskipp, Tim (2003).The Himalayan bluetail is a short-distance altitudinal migrant species, breeding in the Himalaya in bush layer (dwarf rhododendron in wetter areas, deciduous bushes in drier) of conifer and mixed conifer-oak forest, main species fir ( Abies) but sometimes in areas with Picea smithiana or Pinus wallichiana/ Cupressus torulosa forest at 3000–4400 m, not penetrating beyond tree-line and in winters found at 1,500–2,500 m typically in broadleaf evergreen forest, dense dark undergrowth and thickets, clearings, treefall gaps with vine tangles, open woodland commonly seen along tracks favours ridges and mountain tops. It is closely related to the red-flanked bluetail and was generally treated as a subspecies of it in the past, but as well as differing in its migratory behaviour (the red-flanked bluetail is a long-distance migrant), it also differs in the more intense blue colour of the adult males and the greyer colour of the females and juveniles. While currently under review, this taxon is not current recognized as a species by BirdLife international. ![]() The Himalayan bluetail ( Tarsiger rufilatus), also called the Himalayan red-flanked bush-robin or orange-flanked bush-robin, is a small passerine bird that was formerly classed as a member of the thrush family Turdidae, but is now more generally considered to be an Old World flycatcher of Muscicapidae.
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