Green-billed malkoha facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Green-billed malkoha |
|
---|---|
in Nepal | |
Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Genus: |
Phaenicophaeus
|
Species: |
tristis
|
Synonyms | |
|
The green-billed malkoha (Phaenicophaeus tristis) is a species of non-parasitic cuckoo found throughout Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia. The birds are waxy bluish black with a long graduated tail with white tips to the tail feathers. The bill is prominent and curved. These birds are found in dry scrub and thin forests.
Description
Green-billed malkoha is about 50–60 cm centimetres long and weighs 100–128 g. It often has a clear white boarder to the red face patch salty grey on the face and neck. Adult green-billed malkoha has dark grey with green gloss above, oily green wings.
Distribution and habitat
Its breeding habitat is Primary forest, second growth, dense thickets, scrub, cultivated areas, rubber plantations across south Asia east from Nepal, India, and Sri Lanka to the Southeast Asia.
It mainly lives on insects, but also is known to catch small lizards and small mammals. occasionally catches insects in flight, like a flycatcher!
Gallery
-
Green-billed malkoha in Bangladesh
-
at Jayanti in Buxa Tiger Reserve in Jalpaiguri district of West Bengal, India