Beautiful nuthatch
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The beautiful nuthatch (Sitta formosa) is a bird species in the family Sittidae, collectively known as nuthatches. It is a large nuthatch, measuring Template:Convert in length, that is not sexually dimorphic. Its coloration and markings are dramatic, the upper parts being black and azure, streaked with white and pale blue on the head and lined with the same colors on the wing feathers. The Template:Birdgloss are orange, and the Template:Birdgloss and Template:Birdgloss are ochre. An irregular, dark Template:Birdgloss highlights its eye. S. formosaTemplate:'s ecology is not fully described, but it is known to feed on small insects and larvae found on the trunks and epiphyte-covered branches of trees in its range. Reproduction takes place from April to May; the nest is placed in the hole of an oak, rhododendron, or other large tree. The nest is made of plant material and fur in which the bird typically lays four to six eggs.
Although the species is found in most of the countries making up the mainland of Southeast Asia, it appears to be rare throughout its range, its population being highly localized where it is found. The bird nests predominantly in montane forest at an altitudinal range from Template:Convert up to nearly Template:Convert, with some seasonal height adjustment, down to around Template:Convert in winter. Its apparent localization within its range makes rigorous estimates of its population difficult, but its habitat is threatened by deforestation and the species appears to be in decline. It has been classified as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
TaxonomyEdit
The nuthatches constitute a genus – Sitta – of small passerine birds in the family Sittidae,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> typified by short, compressed wings and short, square 12-feathered Template:Birdgloss, a compact body, longish pointed Template:Birdgloss, strong toes with long claws, and behaviorally, by their unique head-first manner of descending tree trunks. Most nuthatches have gray or bluish Template:Birdgloss and a black eyestripe.<ref name="HBW">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Pasquet2014">Template:Cite journal</ref> Sitta is derived from the Ancient Greek name for nuthatches, {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, sittē.<ref name="Jobling">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Sfn "Nuthatch", first recorded in 1350, is derived from "nut" and a word probably related to "hack", since these birds hack at nuts they have wedged into crevices.<ref name="oedjar">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The genus may be further divided into seven subgenera,Template:Cref2 of which the beautiful nuthatch is placed alone in Callisitta (Bonaparte, 1850),Template:Sfn and the species is therefore sometimes called Callisitta Formosa.<ref name="Blyth1843" />
The beautiful nuthatch was first described in 1843 by British zoologist Edward Blyth, from a specimen he examined in Darjeeling.<ref name="Blyth1843">Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="PetersChecklist">Template:Cite book</ref> Its kinship with other members of the genus is unclear. The bright blue color of its Template:Birdgloss invites a comparison to the blue nuthatch (S. azurea), or other blue-tinted nuthatch species such as the velvet-fronted nuthatch (S. frontalis), yellow-billed nuthatch (S. solangiae) and the sulphur-billed nuthatch (S. oenochlamys), but its distribution being focused in the eastern Himalayas, and the uniqueness of its plumage, argues against the assumption.Template:Sfn According to the International Ornithological Congress and ornithologist Alan P. Peterson, no subspecies have been identified.<ref name="IOC">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name="Peterson">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Template:Quote box
In 2014, Eric Pasquet, et al. published a phylogeny based on examination of nuclear and mitochondrial DNA of 21 nuthatch species.Template:Cref2 The position of the beautiful nuthatch within the genus was not established with certainty, having a far lower statistical association than others in the model. Nevertheless, under the findings the species appears closest evolutionarily to three clades of nuthatches: two nuthatches that prefer rocky environments, the western rock nuthatch (S. neumayer) and the eastern rock nuthatch (S. tephronota); species in the "europaea" group, including the Eurasian nuthatch (S. europaea), Siberian nuthatch (S. arctica), chestnut-vented nuthatch (S. nagaensis), Kashmir nuthatch (S. cashmirensis), Indian nuthatch (S. castanea), chestnut-bellied nuthatch (S. cinnamoventris) and the Burmese nuthatch (S. neglecta); as well as the white-tailed nuthatch (S. himalayensis), and therefore, the white-browed nuthatch (S. victoriae). These close relatives are generally all species that plaster the entrance to their nest with mud.<ref name="Pasquet2014" />
DescriptionEdit
Described by Erik Matthysen in his 1998 treatise The Nuthatches as a bird that "deserves its name",Template:Sfn the beautiful nuthatch has highly distinctive plumage. Its upperparts are black and azure, and it is orange on the underparts. The crown and upper mantle are black, streaked with pale blue and white. The scapulars, back and rump are an azure blue. The greater and medium coverts are black, finely edged with white, forming two narrow Template:Birdgloss; the flight feathers are black and more or less lined with pale blue. The eyebrow and throat are white and buff and the eye is highlighted by an irregular, dark eyestripe. Under the wing, the white base of the Template:Birdgloss contrasts sharply with gray Template:Birdgloss; a distinguishing trait when viewing the bird in flight. The iris is reddish-brown or dark brown and the bill is black but for a whitish tinge at the base of the Template:Birdgloss. The lower parts are generally orange-cinnamon. The legs and feet are yellowish-brown, olive-brown or greenish-brown.Template:Sfn
There is no sexual dimorphism.Template:Sfn Juveniles are very similar to adults, but the streaks on the mantle are blue rather than white. The primary coverts of juveniles are also more closely lined with blue, and the underparts are paler overall, especially on the chest. Adults perform a complete moult after the breeding season, whereas juveniles only have a partial moult, in which they replace a variable number of rectrices.Template:Sfn
The bird is large as compared with other members of the genus Sitta, measuring Template:Convert in length.Template:SfnTemplate:Cref2 The folded wing measures Template:Convert in males and Template:Convert in females. The tail is Template:Convert in males and Template:Convert in females. The Template:Birdgloss measures between Template:Convert and Template:Convert and the tarsus is Template:Convert in length. The weight is not known.Template:Sfn
Ecology and behaviorEdit
VoiceEdit
S. formosa's vocalizations are not well known, but its Template:Birdgloss is described as "low and sweet in tone".Template:Sfn Its call is typical of nuthatches, and similar to that of the Eurasian nuthatch (Sitta europaea), but less strident.Template:Sfn
FeedingEdit
The beautiful nuthatch Template:Birdgloss alone, in pairs or in small groups of four to five individuals,Template:Sfn though an unusual gathering of 21 individuals was observed in one tree in Bhutan.<ref name="BirdbaseHokkaido">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It often takes part in mixed-species foraging flocks,Template:Sfn and has been notably observed feeding with the Himalayan cutia (Cutia nipalensis) and the velvet-fronted nuthatch (Sitta frontalis) – two other species that prospect for food on tree trunks. Other foraging flock partners surveyed are the long-tailed broadbill (Psarisomus dalhousiae), the lesser racket-tailed drongo (Dicrurus remifer), the maroon oriole (Oriolus traillii) and the white-browed scimitar babbler (Pomatorhinus schisticeps).<ref name="BirdbaseHokkaido" />
S. formosa forages from about the middle to the apex of tall trees, exploring the trunks and epiphyte-covered branches (lichens, mosses, orchids), for small insects, but also prospect on outermost branches. In Laos, individuals were observed feeding while perched on the larger branches of a Fokienia evergreen (Fokienia hodginsii) – a tree frequently enveloped in epiphytes.<ref name="BirdbaseHokkaido" /> The bird has been described at times as the most timid of nuthatches.Template:Sfn It prospects in a manner typical of many others in its genus, sometimes hanging upside down for an extended time surveying its surroundings. As compared with other nuthatch, the species has been described as working "unhurriedly",<ref name="BirdbaseHokkaido" /> as they peck at trunks, lichen and other epiphytes, searching for prey.Template:Sfn Stomach contents of collected Chinese specimens consisted of beetles and insect larvae.<ref name="BirdbaseHokkaido" />
BreedingEdit
Reproduction in the species has not been well studied. In the northeast of India, the breeding season is from April to May. The nest is placed off the ground, between two and eight meters high, and is often built in a hole of a (living or dead) oak or rhododendron tree, or sometimes in other large trees. Nests are constructed using leaves and bark, held together with hair, often that of bamboo rats. If the opening of the hole is too large, it is cemented with mud to reduce the entrance size. The bird usually lays four to six white eggs, speckled with red spots, that measure Template:Convert.Template:Sfn Beautiful nuthatch sexes are reported to share equally in nest building and Template:Birdgloss duties.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Distribution and habitatEdit
This species lives in the eastern Himalayas, and has been reported in several scattered sites across Southeast Asia, in the northwest of Vietnam and in central Laos. Its range stretches west into the northeast of India, where it was reported seen near Darjeeling in West Bengal, but not since 1933.<ref name="BirdbaseHokkaido" /> It is present in Bhutan, and in the Indian states of Sikkim (in the town of Rangpo), in Meghalaya (in the Khasi Hills), in Assam (in the Dima Hasao district), in the south of Arunachal Pradesh, and in Manipur and Nagaland. Its presence in Bangladesh is uncertain but it is found further east in the north of Burma, in Chin State (in the Chin Hills–Arakan Yoma montane forests), the Sagaing Region, in Kachin State and in Shan State. Data on the bird from Laos is erratic, but there are reports of sightings north of Phou Kobo, and of large numbers of the species wintering in the center of the country in the pristine wilderness of Nakai–Nam Theun. There are also reports of sightings in the southeast of China’s Yunnan province, in northern Thailand and in northwestern Vietnam.Template:Sfn Its residential and breeding range is estimated to cover Template:Convert.<ref name="BLI" />
Beautiful nuthatches typically inhabit both the interior and outskirts of evergreen or semi-evergreen montane forest, though in northern Burma they have been recorded nesting in trees scattered across open areas.Template:Sfn In central Laos, the bird was found associated with the Fokienia evergreen.<ref name="BLI">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> They usually live at altitudes of Template:Convert and up to nearly Template:Convert during the warm seasons but may make seasonal vertical migration. In India, for example, the species spends the summer between Template:Convert and Template:Convert, but was observed during winter at just Template:Convert in Sikkim and in northeastern Arunachal Pradesh at Template:Convert and between Template:Convert and Template:Convert. In Burma, they were observed at between Template:Convert and Template:Convert, in China between Template:Convert and Template:Convert, in Laos between Template:Convert and Template:Convert and in Thailand, the only observation of the species was at a height of Template:Convert.Template:Sfn
Threats and protectionEdit
The beautiful nuthatch has always been rare and very localized throughout its distribution,<ref name="BirdbaseHokkaido" /> perhaps due to very specific ecological requirements, though this has been questioned as not in keeping with the diversity of habitats in which S. formosa has been observed.Template:Sfn<ref name="BirdbaseHokkaido" /> Although the species is less threatened at high elevations, its habitat has been reduced by deforestation, due to logging and forest clearance to make way for human habitation.Template:Sfn<ref name="BirdbaseHokkaido" /> In the center of Laos and northern Vietnam, Fokienia trees, which are a known beautiful nuthatch foraging source and nesting site, are harvested for their high commercial value.<ref name="BLI" /> Research conducted in 2001 indicated a population comprising 2,500 to 10,000 adults, and between 3,500 and 15,000 total individuals; these numbers are in decline. The species has been classified as vulnerable by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).<ref name="iucn status 19 November 2021" />
FootnotesEdit
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CitationsEdit
BibliographyEdit
External linksEdit
Template:Sister project Template:Sister project
- Oriental Bird Images: Beautiful Nuthatch Template:Webarchive, selected images