Hello friends, hope you are doing
good, before we start let me thank everyone for reading blogs religiously,
your blessings motivate me to find something new every time.
So after back-to-back trip reports let
me update you with one lovely bird, which I recently found near Lonavala. Today’s
blog is also a type of trip report but it is for only one bird as compared to
other trips where we can see countless birds. Let’s go and meet this small bird
of prey.
The Small Trip
Trip to Lonavala was just unplanned because it
is famous for weekend leisure trip but never thought that it also offers sighting of
such a lovely bird known as “Lesser Kestrel.”
Vishnu got the news that this
bird is currently roaming around Lonavala and is a major attraction for the
birders. When I got the news I was unable to drive to Lonavala due to a UK trip
but on my arrival to Mumbai immediately the next day I requested Vishnu to accompany
to visit this place of the special bird. Vishnu as a true friend never says no for birding and
photography opportunities. He accepted the request and joined me for Lesser
Kestrel capture. This is how we reached the destination without any planning.
Here Aarin (Jr. Vishnu) also joined us for birding, Along with Kestrel the real action was little Aarin, it was a treat to see six-year-old champion with such a high enthusiasm towards wildlife at this age.
Sometimes an unplanned trip is much more rewarding
then the planned trip, so let's move to the next section to feel the rewards.
Wonderful facts
The lesser kestrel (Falco naumanni) is a small
falcon. This species breeds from the Mediterranean across Afghanistan and
Central Asia, to China and Mongolia
It is a summer migrant, wintering in Africa and Pakistan,
and sometimes even to India and Iraq. It is rare north of its breeding range,
and declining in its European range
The genus name derives from Late Latin falx,
falcis, a sickle, referencing the claws of the bird, and the species name
commemorates the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Naumann
It is a small bird of prey, 27–33 cm
(11–13 in) in length with a 63–72 cm (25–28 in) wingspan. It looks very much
like the larger common kestrel but has proportionally shorter wings and tail
The male has a grey head and tail like
male common kestrels, but lacks the dark spotting on the back, the black malar
stripe, and has grey patches in the wings
The female and young birds are
slightly paler than their relative, but are so similar that call and structure
are better guides than plumage
The morphological similarity with the common
kestrel is most puzzling, but still, it appears to betray the present species'
actual relationships: the lack of a malar stripe seems ancestral for kestrels,
and the grey wing color unites the lesser kestrel with most other Falco
species, but not the other true kestrels
The lesser kestrel is, as the name
implies, a smaller and more delicate bird than the common kestrel, and it is
entirely sympatric in its breeding range with it; they compete to a limited
extent
The lesser kestrel eats insects, but also, small birds, reptiles, and rodents (especially mice), which are often taken on the ground
Lesser kestrel would, in fact, have an
advantage if some would-be predators confused it with the larger species and
consequently avoided it, it might be a case of Müllerian mimicry. Müllerian
mimicry is a natural phenomenon in which two or more well-defended species,
often foul-tasting and that share common predators, have come to mimic each
other's honest warning signals, to their mutual benefit
Please visit DSLR section to co-relate
the content with pictures, do let me know if you need any help to visit any of
these places, get in touch with me on btwildart@gmail.com
Learning
of the day
State
Bird of Chhattisgarh
The common hill myna (Gracula religiosa), sometimes
spelled "mynah" and formerly simply known as hill myna or myna bird,
is the myna most commonly seen in aviculture, where it is often simply referred
to by the latter two names.
BT Wild Art
DSLR Section
It's just few days I have started following your blog. Really amazing lively pics with detailed discription of every bird is awesome. Super..keep writing....
ReplyDeleteGreat work bhavesh
ReplyDeleteYou put in a lot of effort in gathering info and then presenting it
Thank u
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