Category: Conservation


Bird watchers know that all Flycatchers catch bees, wasps, dragonflies, butterflies and other insects as part of their diet. (Indeed, so do many other birds.)

So…you’d expect the personnel manning the Butterfly Park in the Bannerghatta Zoo area to know that as well. And, when they see a bird catching a butterfly, they would just catch it with a net and release it elsewhere, wouldn’t you?

You’d be…’dead’ wrong.

That’s the right word to use in the circumstances.

Srikant VK writes:

“The employers of the butterfly park saw the flycatcher catching some butterflies,the only crime this innocent little bird did was to fill its belly by eating butterflies. They cud have caught it through the bird net and released it but they immediately shot it with the Air gun. This was witnessed by friend and another student who is doing some studies on butterflies. They objected before the act but the zoo keepers did not bother to listen.

I feel that it is insane of zoo keepers to do this. Are they instructed to do so? It looks as if the gun is used for this purpose only. Can’t they think of any better alternative ? We need to stop this or we are going to lose many birds in that particular region. Can someone take this up with the respective authorities ?

He’s also sent a picture of the picture of the dead bird. This was taken by Ritesh Singh Siddharth, one of the two people who tried to protest the killing of the bird.

 

apk killed at btrfly pk 020313 photo apf.jpg

Would you like to know what a male Asian Paradise Flycatcher looks like? It’s one of the more spectacular birds we have:
apf ave 060113 bgz photo DSC09047.jpg

When are our Forest Department personnel going to learn to respect wildlife, and when are they going to be held accountable for such wanton acts of cruelty?

Hoskote Lake was a bit in discussion. So, we decide to have a 4-5 hours of Sunday birding. This is one of the marvelous grassland, i have seen around Bangalore. For those who want to do birding, please go in group. I heard a lot of community problem. This place is THE land of stork, ibis, sandpiper, snipe, raptors and worth to watch their habitats. I tried to put all the pictures here, so that we can see the habitat as well for the birds.

white stork - Family

white stork – Family

Oriental Honey Buzzard

Oriental Honey Buzzard

northern shoveler - Flocks at flight

northern shoveler – Flocks at flight

northern shoveler

northern shoveler

northern shoveler

northern shoveler

 northern shoveler - float show

northern shoveler – float show

I guess combination of some more ducks

I guess combination of some more ducks

Blyth Reed Warbler

Blyth Reed Warbler

Blyth Reed Warbler

Blyth Reed Warbler

Green Sandpiper - Pair

Green Sandpiper – Pair

Flock of Garganey at fight

Flock of Garganey at fight

Glossy ibis

Glossy ibis

Flock of Sandpiper and Little Stint

Flock of Sandpiper and Little Stint

Flock of Sandpiper and Litte Stint

Flock of Sandpiper and Little Stint

Glossy ibis with Purple Heron

Glossy ibis with Purple Heron

Common Kestrel

Common Kestrel

Common Hawk Cuckoo

Common Hawk Cuckoo

Marsh Harrier get attacked by Eagle

Marsh Harrier get attacked by Eagle

Marsh Harrier

Marsh Harrier

Marsh Harrier

Marsh Harrier

Short toed Snake Eagle

Short toed Snake Eagle

Indian Spotted Eagle - I believe

Indian Spotted Eagle – I believe

Indian Spotted Eagle - I believe

Indian Spotted Eagle – I believe

Kannan - Down for shot

Kannan – Down for shot

IMG_8214

ID required

ID required

Barn Swallow Family

Barn Swallow Family

Yellow Wagtail

Yellow Wagtail

Black eared Kite

Black eared Kite

IMG_8103

Oriental White IBIS - Family

Oriental White IBIS – Family

IMG_8074

Brahminy Kite

Brahminy Kite

Flock of Baya Weaver

Flock of Baya Weaver

Flock of Baya Weaver

Flock of Baya Weaver

Clamorous Reed Warbler

Clamorous Reed Warbler

Clamorous Reed Warbler

Clamorous Reed Warbler

ID required

ID required

IMG_7932

Sykes Lark

Sykes Lark

Spot Billed Duck

Spot Billed Duck

White eye buzzard

White eye buzzard

Short toed Snake Eagle

Short toed Snake Eagle

Skyes Lark

Skyes Lark

Poornima with camouflage to the grassland

Poornima with camouflage to the grassland

Common Snipe - Sorry for the quality

Common Snipe – Sorry for the quality

Wooly Necked Stork

Wooly Necked Stork

Marsh Harrier attack to the flock of garganery

Marsh Harrier attack to the flock of garganery

I’ve spoken before of my friend who has now developed into a professional wildlife photographer. He got together with a team, and directed this video; the images are all from Karnataka:

The lyrics are written by H S Venkateshamurthy, and Ricky Kej is the music director.

here

is the Deccan Herald write-up about it.

It is being released today, on the occasion of Rajyostava Day.

Congrats, Amogh, and may other such efforts follow!

They say – short and sweet. We reached to God’s own country “Kerala” on Saturday morning. Plan was simple. Enjoy the best. Nature, birds, wild and whatsoever we can.

Epic view of Black Eagle when we were on the top of Chembra 3rd Peak, the highest peak of Wayanad, Kerala. The Kestrel hovering and diving at an amazing speed. Elephant family crossing the Bandipur road. Bison having his morning breakfast. Malabar barbet enjoying the fruits. 100′s of Scarlet minivet and many more.

Wayanad, Kerala is 250 km from Bangalore and one of the best enjoying weekend place.

Black Eagle at the top of Chembra Peak

Scarlet Minivet at Edekkal Caves

Brown-capped Woodpecker at Eddekal Caves

Black-lored Tit at Eddekal Caves

Female Scarlet Minivet with Prey at Chembra Peak

Loten’s Sunbird seeking the nectar – Shot in Wayanad

Golden-fronted Leafbird (Chloropsis) – Shot at Wayanad

Asian Drongo-Cuckoo at Eddekal Cave

White rumped Munia at Eddekal Caves

Just before starting, I had posted the question in Facebook where to do birding in Wayanad and then I was half able to explore. One more trip will explore the more beauty of nature and birding in Wayanad. More pictures are yet to come, stay tuned…

On a lighter note (we saw this bird) and hence this question popped up.
Did you some one you asked did not disclose this location ?

In other words, was I sour-graping because I was not being told the location of this (or any othe recently discovered) bird?

My response to him:

Ha, ha, Vinaya, I know better than to ask for the location! Have I asked you? (I know you saw it.) No, it’s not a case of sour grapes…in fact, the reverse, as I have given the location of various birds to many expert birders, after discovering them by sheer accident (eg . Indian Eagle Owl at Ramnagara or Turahalli.) I can confidently say, go look in Valley School, you will find the Indian Eagle Owl. This does not guarantee that the person will see it!

I am a well-known “L-birder”….I have neither the  knowledge nor the scientific background to quality. :) Neither will I ask where the Pratincole, or the Emu, or the Mute Swan,  the Roc, or the Phoenix,  are to be found. Most birds will, for me, be found only within the covers of my Grimmskipp , Salam Salim, Pam Aunty, or Kashmirjack. You think I will go on a ship-without-a-toilet to see pelagic birds? The answer is, Gua—no!

We’ve already had the hilarious situation, in Lalbagh, of a totally non-bird interested jogger coming up and telling us, “Some crows are harassing some bird which I don’t know, can you help?” It proved to be the Mottled Wood Owl. No  humans (birders or non-birders)  were troubling it…but it was the ever-present mobsters, the crows.The Mottled Wood Owls, in spite of the Lalbagh crowds, have been at their location off and on over the years.

My birding friends here  in St.Louis, Mark Glenshaw, Chris Ferree, Mary Dueren (Audubon Society)  and Danny Brown (Wildlife photographer and conservation scientist) , freely share the location of birds and animals in Forest Park, with me. That doesn’t mean that I can see them all the time! In fact, in the heights and the thick foliage  of the Cottonwood trees, even when Mark is showing me where the  huge female Great Horned Owl is sitting…it takes me several minutes to spot her. It took me a week of scouting the right area before I saw the mink family, and the little baby mink came up to my feet and looked up at me!

Oh well…there are valid things about both points of view (share and don’t share)  and ne’er the twain shall meet…unfortunately, birding is becoming a “I-know-so-and-so-who-will-tell-me-where-x-bird-is-to-be-found” kind of activity. This is why I like my UGS (Usual Gang of Suspects)…we are a happy-go-lucky lot who are as thrilled to see an Agama in front of the Udupi Banashree Darshini as we are to see a Crested Hawk Eagle at Nandi Hills! We don’t want the secret birds……where the ordinary birds are, is secret enough for us most of the time!

Cheers, Deepa.

Not very far from the city, this lake provides the most number of water birds. Wikimapia Coordinates for the Meeting Place: 12°43’12″N 77°41’24″E. Enjoy the pictures, do drop your comments… thank you.

Brahminy Kite, fish under feet.

Pied Wagtail with broken beak

Grey Bellied Cuckoo - Back pose

Richard's Pipit with prey

Red Avadavat - Female

Wood Sandpiper

Spotted Owlet

Pied Cuckoo - A true pied beauty

Plain Prinia

Ashy Prinia

Pheasant Tailed Jacana

Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology and Environment (ATREE), Bangalore is organizing a ‘Vacation Training Program on Bio-Resources’ for students from 7th May to 26th May 2012.

Funded by Department of Bio-Technology, Government of India, this program consists of lectures and interactive sessions with eminent scientists and experts in the field of biology and bio-resources, visits to research institutes, orientation to skills required for field-biology and out-door camps. Students who have appeared in Class X examination in 2012 from recognized schools in Karnataka are eligible to apply. The application forms and other details are available on our website. Please visit
http://atree.org/vtp

Last date to receive completed applications is 25th April 2012.

Inverted Comma-ization….

I do not often indulge in nostalgia, being a person who enjoys the vibrancy of the present as much as the glow of the past. But once in a while….

It was saddening to read of

the closure of Hotel Brindavan, on M G Road

here is a link, with reviews, to the hotel

My cousin got married in this hotel.It was an oasis of peace on M G Road. Well, certainly, service and the quality of food at the restaurant and hotel had been dropping of late..just like at the erstwhile India Coffee House, that also once stood on the same road.

The value of everything seems to be reckoned only in money terms, in Bangalore, at least….there seems to be no value for heritage, history or culture…except if they can be marketed as “heritage”, “history”, and “culture”. Otherwise, it is all “real estate”. Sad at the inverted-commaization of our inheritance…we are now camera-toting tourists, treading over our own pasts, while commercial buildings of chrome, steel and glass mushroom in the spaces where gracious bungalows and majestic buildings stood. Cars bearing tycoons whizz by where immemorial trees shaded the roads. Truly public spaces are shrinking, and there is no plan for creating any more. Some things about Bangalore make me sad. Our quality of life has become much worse, and continues to deteriorate. Money talks, and commerce seems to be the only common language of our city.

It’s been quite a hectic time, as I’ve been doing some amount of volunteering and some amount of for-me nature trails, too. Last Sunday, 18 (yes!) of us went to

Maidanahalli

as several people in the UGS (Usual Gang of Suspects, our group of friends who like to go for nature trails), and had a wonderful time, that included an awesome sunset.

The pictures of the birds are on my FB album

here

the scenery and general photographs are

here

and that technicolour sunset is

here

On Saturday last, I took 15 children from Sindhi School, Malleswaram, to the Bannerghatta forest (zoo area) and the pictures from that are

here

On Thursday, just 5 of us (it’s a working day for many, and this time, the children didn’t want to come) went to

Manchanabele Dam and Reservoir

All these were wonderful outings…and let me just show you a few sights from yesterday’s outing…

This is what the sky looked like just before sunrise….

snrise  L mnchnble 291211

snrise L mnchnble 291211

 

And this

INDIAN SILVERBILL

was one of the delightful little birds around…

L slvrbill 291211 mnchnble

silevrbill

 

Some of the birds…

RIVER TERNS

preening on the water, after finishing their fish breakfast:

L rvr trns 291211 mnchnble

River tern

 

A

BRAHMINY STARLING

showed off a cool hairstyle!

L brmny strlng 291211 mnchnble

A

BLACK DRONGO

showed off its glossy feathers:

L blck drngo stick 291211 mnchnble

A

BOOTED EAGLE

soared above, delighting us:

L booted eagle 291211 mnchnble

So did a

BRAHMINY KITE

much more common, but still, a beauty.

L brhmny kite 291211 mnchnble

Some

RIVER TERNS

behind a rock gave me a funny photograph!
L wing rock 291211 mnchnble

The terns then took off:

L tern tkoff 291211 mnchnble

We enjoyed watching the

LOCAL GEESE

L 3 geese 291211 mnchnble

This

PIED WAGTAIL

and its companion wagged their tails along the shore:

L Pd wgtl rock 291211 mnchnble

We watched this

ASIAN OPEN-BILLED STORK

and its companion, too:

L opn bil stk fshing 291211 mnchnble

The stork made a lovely picture against the water:

Photobucket

Liked the takeoff!

L op bl stk takeoff 291211 mnchnble

A lone

ASHY-CROWNED SPARROW LARK

sat on a granite slab:

a c sprlark  L mnchnble 291211

One of the hightlights of the morning was seeing three of the

HOOPOES

together, I got this one on the shore:

L hpe shore 291211 mnchnble

This little

PLAIN PRINIA

tried to hide in the Lantatna bushes:

L pln prna 291211 mnchnble

this

LAUGHING DOVE

posed for us on the rocks:

L lfng dv rock291211 mnchnble

A

BAY-BACKED SHRIKE

also sat helpfully on the bush:

L by bck shrk 291211 mnchnble

A

SMALL GREEN BEE-EATER

was actually eating a bee!

L beeater with b 291211 mnchnble

I loved the sight of this old pavilion:

sun and pvlin  L mnchnble 291211

And some distance away were people working in a field of marigolds:

L fld of mrglds 291211 mnchnble

I completely enjoyed the sight of this

PIED BUSHCHAT

apparently visiting us to sit on the car!

L bscht on car 291211 mnchnble

Hope you can see my photographs of the other trips, too…

It was a fair fog when we have started from home at 5.45 but as we have entered into the Bannerghatta forest area, it gave us a mind blowing view(to not view anything :P ). Waiting till 9, misty went down and we were able to do some birding. I will soon add into the PLACE area where exactly we went. Here are some of the pictures and enjoyable moment

Misty had left some interesting drops for us

We were also waiting for Almighty to show the power

In mist, Grey Francolin seek our attention

And so a Jerdon's Bushlark

Paddy Field Pipit - A beauty

Common Hoopoe - Which is uncommon now

Red Vented Bulbul - Red visible

White throated Kingfisher

Rufous Tailed Lark

Pied Wagtail - Walking on pipe

Indian Robin - Female

Common Jezebel

Pied Bushchat - Male

Pea Blue Pairs

Crimson Rose

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