Harpactes fasciatus (Pennant, 1769) is a animal in the Trogonidae family, order Trogoniformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Harpactes fasciatus (Pennant, 1769) (Harpactes fasciatus (Pennant, 1769))
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Harpactes fasciatus (Pennant, 1769)

Harpactes fasciatus (Pennant, 1769)

Harpactes fasciatus (Malabar trogon) is a sexually dimorphic trogon species found in South Asia, with distinct behaviour and breeding ecology.

Family
Genus
Harpactes
Order
Trogoniformes
Class
Aves

About Harpactes fasciatus (Pennant, 1769)

Like most other trogons, Harpactes fasciatus (commonly known as the Malabar trogon) are brightly coloured and sexually dimorphic. The male has a slaty black head and breast, with a white border to the black bib that separates it from the crimson underside. The back ranges from olive-brown to chestnut. The wing coverts are black with fine white vermiculations. This species has 12 graduated tail feathers. The central tail feathers are chestnut with a black tip; the second and third pairs from the middle have more black than chestnut, and the outer three pairs have long white tips. The female lacks the male’s contrasting black and crimson colouring. She has only a slightly darker head and breast that shades into the olive brown of the back, and the male’s crimson underside is replaced by ochre. In both sexes, the beak and the skin around the eye are bluish. The iris is dark brown and the feet are pale bluish. The nostrils are covered by tufts of filoplumes. The feet are heterodactyl, a feature unique to trogons: digits I and II face backward, while digits III and IV point forward. In most birds, I, II and III face forward while IV faces back, and in zygodactyly, II and III face forward while I and IV face backwards. Several populations of this species have been named as subspecies. The central Indian subspecies legerli, named by Walter Norman Koelz based on a single specimen collected at the foot of Mahendra Giri in Orissa, is not always recognized. It is described as slightly larger, longer-winged and brighter than malabaricus, the subspecies found in the Western Ghats. The nominate race, found in the central wet zone of Sri Lanka, is smaller and has brighter upperparts. In terms of behaviour and ecology, these birds usually perch still, especially when alarmed, and will sometimes cling laterally to branches. When calling, they sometimes raise and lower their tail. The call is a series of guttural or purring notes, and the male’s song is a series of percussive kyau calls. The breeding season is mainly February to May, before the monsoons, in India, and March to June in Sri Lanka. When sitting still, they appear hunched. The Hindi name used by hunters, kafni churi, refers to this hunched, neckless appearance, which looks like a fakir wearing a kafni robe. It is called karna in Marathi, kakarne hakki in Kannada, and theekakka in Kerala, a name that literally means "fire-crow". In Sinhala, the name used in Sri Lanka is loha wannichcha. Malabar trogons feed exclusively on insects; fruits have not been noted in their diet unlike New World trogons, though seeds have been reported in the diet of Sri Lankan specimens. In the forests of Sri Lanka, they are often found in mixed-species foraging flocks, where they may sometimes be subject to kleptoparasitism by drongos. A study in Kerala found that they foraged mainly at heights of 5 to 10 m, with females tending to forage lower within the canopy. When foraging on bark, they prop themselves using their tail like woodpeckers, especially on decaying tree stumps. They sometimes descend to the ground to search for insects under leaf litter. They will sometimes fly to try to flush prey, then hover to pick up the prey. They may also hang upside down to reach prey on vertical tree surfaces. Prey are often mashed or struck on a branch between the mandibles before being eaten, or before being fed to young. The contact call is a series of about five low-intensity que notes; these notes are higher intensity during territorial fights. The alarm call is a churrrr, and a similar call is also made prior to roosting. Although their flight is fast, they are reluctant to fly. In the Nilgiri hills, they are altitudinal migrants, found in higher reaches only during summer. The nest is built in rotting trees or stumps, which are easy to carve and pulverize using their bills. The male and female take turns excavating the nest with their bills, and excavation may take about a month. The nest floor is made of wood powder, and no extra lining is added. A study in Kerala found two eggs to be the normal clutch, though older sources suggest the typical clutch size is three eggs. The eggs are laid two days apart, and incubated by both males and females, with females usually incubating at night. The incubation period is about 19 days. Hatchlings are fed mainly caterpillars in the initial period, and later are provided with bugs, flies and orthopterans. The parents do not remove the nestlings’ excreta from the nest. Adults continue to feed fledged juveniles for nearly 5 to 6 months. The species is socially monogamous, with pair bonds that last more than one breeding season. Sri Lankan birds have been observed plunging into water from an overhanging branch to bathe. A species of endoparasitic cestode, Triaenorhina burti, has been described from Harpactes fasciatus.

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Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Trogoniformes Trogonidae Harpactes

More from Trogonidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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