Indian Grey Hornbill

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News: Gujarat’s Gir forests have recorded a major conservation success with the successful reintroduction and breeding of the Indian Grey Hornbill.

About Indian Grey Hornbill

Indian Grey Hornbill
Source: DD News
  • The Indian grey hornbill is a tropical bird found on the Indian subcontinent.
  • Scientific name: Its scientific name is Ocyceros birostris. 
  • Habitat: It prefers dry plains, foothills, and open habitats.
  • Distribution: Among all the hornbill species in India, the Indian grey hornbill is the most widely distributed.
    • Its range spans the length (Jammu to Kerala) and breadth (Rajasthan to West Bengal) of India. 
    • It is also distributed in parts of some neighbouring countries, including Pakistan, Nepal, and Bangladesh. 
    • It doesn’t migrate but may make local movements in the drier western region. 
  • Characteristics:
    • Appearance:  Unlike the eight other hornbill species found in India, the Indian grey hornbill is not brightly coloured. 
      • It is a medium-sized bird with greyish-brown upper parts and a slight trace of a pale supercilium.
      • The ear coverts are darker.
      • The flight feathers of the wing are dark brown with a whitish tip.
      • The tail has a white tip and a dark subterminal band.
      • It has a red iris, and the eyelids have eyelashes. The casque is short and pointed.
      • The male has a larger casque on a dark bill, and the culmen and lower mandible are yellowish.
        • The bare skin around the eye is dark in males, but sometimes pale reddish in females.
      • The female has a more yellowish bill with black on the basal half and on the casque.
      • The juveniles lack the casque, and the bare skin around the eye is dull orange.
    • Diet: It is a herbivore (frugivore). Sometimes, it also feeds on molluscs, scorpions, insects, small birds, and reptiles.
    • Behaviour: It is active during the day and usually spends time in pairs or small groups.
      • It is arboreal, but very rarely descends to the ground.
      • It is quite noisy, producing squealing calls, loud cackling, or short pipping-like sounds.
      • Its flight is heavy, involving flapping interspersed with glides.
      • It prefers mature trees with large trunk girths, particularly Sterculia urens and Terminalia bellirica.
  • Ecological role: It plays a crucial ecological role as a long-distance seed disperser, helping regenerate forests by transporting seeds of fruit-bearing trees across large areas
  • Threat: It is mainly threatened by the :
    • Loss of dry forests and fruit trees
    • Hunting, and
    • Disturbance from agriculture and livestock grazing
  • Conservation status:
    • IUCN Red List:  Least Concern (LC) 
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