Heen Kottoruwa - Ceylon Small Barbet (Megalaima rubricapillus)
Identification
Slightly larger than a sparrow. Sexes alike. The bright green upper
parts, orange-yellow-face and throat-patches, and very small scarlet
breast-spot, distinguish it from the Crimson-breasted Barbet.
Behavior
Out of the breeding season it is very gregarious, forming large, scattered flocks especially in the neighbourhood of fruiting trees, such as banyan, bo, and other wild figs; like all barbets it is predominantly a fruit eater. After gorging themselves, they repair to the top branches and indulge in their hobby of vocal music, making the air pulsate with the chorus of pop op oping-to the distraction of their human audience.
Out of the breeding season it is very gregarious, forming large, scattered flocks especially in the neighbourhood of fruiting trees, such as banyan, bo, and other wild figs; like all barbets it is predominantly a fruit eater. After gorging themselves, they repair to the top branches and indulge in their hobby of vocal music, making the air pulsate with the chorus of pop op oping-to the distraction of their human audience.
The breeding season is from January to June. The nest-hole is
indistinguishable from that of the Crimsone-breasted Barbet, but is more
often, I think, dug into the lower surface of a sloping branch rather
than into an upright post, and is usually higher in a tree than with
that species. Dead branches of breadfruit, dadap, and flamboyant are
much favoured as nesting site by both species. Two or three white eggs
are laid on the bare wood at the bottom of cavity; they measure about
25.5 x 18.2 mm.
Location
This bulbul is This is a very common bird in cultivated or openly-wooded country throughout the wet zone up to 4,000 feet, and in scattered colonies in parts of the dry zone.
This bulbul is This is a very common bird in cultivated or openly-wooded country throughout the wet zone up to 4,000 feet, and in scattered colonies in parts of the dry zone.
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