Paddyfield Pipit

Paddyfield Pipit
In Kolkata, West Bengal, India.
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Motacillidae
Genus: Anthus
Species: A. rufulus
Binomial name
Anthus rufulus
Vieillot, 1818
Synonyms

Corydalla rufula

Paddyfield Pipit (Anthus rufulus) is a small passerine bird in the pipits and wagtail family. It is a resident breeder in open scrub, grassland and cultivation in southern Asia east to the Philippines. Although among the few breeding pipits in the Asian region, identification becomes difficult in winter when several other species migrate into the region. The taxonomy of the species is complex and has undergone considerable changes.

Contents

Description

This is a large pipit at 15 cm, but is otherwise an undistinguished looking bird, mainly streaked grey-brown above and pale below with breast streaking. It is long legged with a long tail and a long dark bill. Sexes are similar. Summer and winter plumages are similar. Young birds are more richly coloured below than adults and have the pale edges to the feather's of the upper parts more conspicuous with more prominent spotting on the breast. The population waitei from northwestern India and Pakistan is pale while the population malayensis from the Western Ghats is larger, darker and more heavily streaked with nominate rufulus intermediate.

In winter some care must be taken to distinguish this from other pipits that winter in the area, such as Richard's Pipit, Anthus richardi and Blyth's Pipit, Anthus godlewskii. Paddyfield Pipit is smaller and dumpier, has shorter looking tail and has a weaker fluttering flight. The usually uttered characteristic "chip-chip-chip" call is quite different from usual calls of Richard's Pipit (explosive "shreep") and Blyth's Pipit (nasal "pschreen"). Tawny Pipit has less streaking on the mantle and has a black loreal stripe and a longer tail. The Western Ghats population can appear very similar to the Nilgiri Pipit.[2][3]

Taxonomy and systematics

Some of the subspecies in the group were formerly treated as a subspecies of the Australasian Pipit Anthus novaeseelandiae and the grouping has been in state of flux.[4] Considerable colour and morphological variation with age and latitude make the species difficult to identify museum specimens.[5] Six subspecies are now included in this species.[6]

Behaviour and ecology

A wide spread species found in open habitats, especially short grassland and cultivation with open bare ground. It runs rapidly on the ground, and when flushed, does not fly far.

Breeds throughout the year but mainly in the dry season. Birds may have two or more broods in a year. During the breeding season, it sings by repeating the note during its descent from a short fluttery flight, a few feet above the ground. It builds its nest on the ground under a slight prominence, a tuft of grass, or at the edge of a bush. The nests are woven out of grass and leaves and are normally cup shaped. Exposed nests are sometimes domed or semi-domed, the long grass at the back and sides extending over the top.Nests are lined with finer grass or roots and sometimes with a little dry moss, bracken or other material at the base of the nest. The usual clutch is 3-4 eggs with greenish ground color and numerous small brown specks at the larger. When disturbed near the nest, the birds flutter nearby with weak tsip-tsip-tsip calls. Parent birds may also feign injury to distract predators.[7]

It feeds principally on small insects but consumes larger beetles, tiny snails, worms etc. while walking on the ground, and may pursue insects like mosquitoes or termites in the air.[3]

A species of Haemoproteus, H. anthi, has been described from this species.[9]

References

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2009). "Anthus rufulus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.2. International Union for Conservation of Nature. http://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/149158. 
  2. ^ Rasmussen PC & JC Anderton (2005). Birds of South Asia: The Ripley Guide. Volume 2. Smithsonian Institution & Lynx Edicions. p. 318. 
  3. ^ a b Baker, ECS (1926). Fauna of British India. Birds. Volume 3 (2 ed.). Taylor and Francis, London. pp. 290–291. http://www.archive.org/stream/BakerFbiBirds3/BakerFBI3#page/n315/mode/1up. 
  4. ^ Voelker, G (1999). "Dispersal, Vicariance, and Clocks: Historical Biogeography and Speciation in a Cosmopolitan Passerine Genus (Anthus: Motacillidae)". Evolution 53 (5): 1536–1552. doi:10.2307/2640899. 
  5. ^ Hall, BP (1961). "The taxonomy and identification of pipits (genus Anthus)". Bull. Brit. Mus. (Nat. Hist.), Zool. 7 (5): 245–289. http://www.archive.org/stream/bulletinofbritis07zool#page/n328/mode/1up/. 
  6. ^ "Paddyfield Pipit (Anthus rufulus) - the Internet Bird Collection". http://ibc.lynxeds.com/species/paddyfield-pipit-anthus-rufulus. 
  7. ^ Ali, S & SD Ripley (1998). Handbook of the birds of India and Pakistan. 9 (2 ed.). Oxford University Press. pp. 255–260. 
  8. ^ Sangvaranond, A; Sataporn Jittapalapong, Kaset Sutasha and Wissanuwat Chimnoi1 (2007). "Case Report: Cnemidocoptiasis (Scaly Leg) of Paddyfield Pipit Bird (Anthus rufulus) in Petchaburi Province of Thailand". Kasetsart Veterinarians 17 (2): 91–96. http://kasetsartjournal.ku.ac.th/kuj_files/2009/A0903091444263437.pdf. 
  9. ^ Bennett, G. F.; Peirce, M. A. (1990). "The haemoproteids of the Old World avian families Alaudidae (larks), Irenidae (leaf birds), and Motacillidae (wagtails and pipits)". Journal of Natural History 24 (4): 939–947. 

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