Bengal Florican
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Bengal Florican | ||||||||||||||
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Male (standing) and female
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| Houbaropsis bengalensis (Gmelin, 1789) |
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Eupodotis bengalensis |
The Bengal Florican, Houbaropsis bengalensis, is a bustard, the only member of the genus Houbaropsis. It has two disjunct populations, one in the Indian subcontinent, another in South East Asia. The former occurs from Uttar Pradesh, India, through the terai of Nepal, to Assam and Arunachal Pradesh, India, and historically to Bangladesh. The South East Asian population occurs in Cambodia and adjacent southern Vietnam.
The male has black feathers running from head to neck and underparts. The dorsal side is buff with fine black vermiculations and black arrowhead markings, and it has a conspicuous white patch on the wing coverts. Females are larger than the male and have a buff brown colour, with a dark brown crown and narrow dark streak down the side of the neck.
They are normally silent but when disturbed utters a metallic chik-chik-chik call.
They are usually seen in the early mornings and evenings and are easily spotted in the breeding season of March to August. They live in open tall grassland habitats with scattered bushes.[1]
The population is declining dramatically and only survives in small, highly fragmented populations (220-280 birds in India and up to 100 in Nepal). Consequently, it is uplisted from Endangered to Critically Endangered status in the 2007 IUCN Red List.[2]
[edit] Footnotes
[edit] References
- BirdLife International (2004). Houbaropsis bengalensis. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 09 May 2006.
- BirdLife International (2007a): [ 2006-2007 Red List status changes ]. Retrieved 2007-AUG-26.
- BirdLife International (2007b): Bengal Florican - BirdLife Species Factsheet. Retrieved 2007-MAY-22.
- Grimmett, Richard; Inskipp, Carol & Inskipp, Tim (1998): Birds of the Indian Subcontinent. Christopher Helm, London. ISBN 0713640049
The government of Cambodia has taken a significant step towards protecting important habitat for the Bengal Florican. In an effort to save this endangered flagship species from extinction, more than one hundred miles of grassland habitat is to be set aside as integrated farming and biodiversity areas. Restricted to tiny fragments of grassland scattered across Cambodia, Nepal and India, the Bengal Florican, the world's rarest bustard, is known to have become increasingly threatened by land conversion for intensive agriculture, particularly from dry season rice production.

