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Showing posts with label BLUE WHISTLING THRUSH (Myophonus caeruleus). Show all posts
Showing posts with label BLUE WHISTLING THRUSH (Myophonus caeruleus). Show all posts

Wednesday 10 January 2018

19-3-2015 BOTANIC GARDENS, SINGAPORE - BLUE WHISTLING THRUSH (Myophonus caeruleus)


The blue whistling thrush (Myophonus caeruleus) is a bird in the Old World flycatchers family Muscicapidae that is found in the mountains of Central Asia, South Asia, China and Southeast Asia. It is known for its loud human-like whistling song at dawn and dusk. The widely distributed populations show variations in size and plumage with several of them considered as subspecies. Like others in the genus, they feed on the ground, often along streams and in damp places foraging for snails, crabs, fruits and insects.

This whistling thrush is dark violet blue with shiny spangling on the tips of the body feathers other than on the lores, abdomen and under the tail. The wing coverts are a slightly different shade of blue and the median coverts have white spots at their tips. The bill is yellow and stands in contrast. The inner webs of the flight and tail feathers is black. The sexes are similar in plumage.