• June 9, 2025
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The Bird With an Orange Bib – The Rufous-Gorgeted Flycatcher, Male
The Rufous-Gorgeted Flycatcher is a bold little
flycatcher of mid to high-altitude forests with a
flashing black-and-white tail. As the name
denotes, they are known for their reddish brown
colour with a distinctly coloured patch on their
throat. Male is brown above with a black face,
white eyebrow, and orange throat patch (Gorget).
The female is essentially a faded version of the
male with a dark gray face and a pale, largely
unnoticeable gorget. Usually perches at middle
levels, sallying from its perch to catch flying
insects. Often joins mixed-species feeding flocks.
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…….. …………. The Rufous-Gorgeted
Flycatcher is a small to medium-sized forest
flycatcher with prominent face pattern, rufous
patch on breast and white patches at base of tail.
It is a small-sized bird that has a length of only
up to 13 to 14.5 cm in length and weighing between
10 to 15 gms. The Male of the nominate race has
white on forehead extending narrowly over lores to
above eye, black cheek, chin and throat, deep grey
forecrown, ear-coverts and side of neck; rear
crown hindneck and upperparts, including
upperwing, olive-brown, tertials and inner
secondaries edged warm brown; uppertail-coverts
dark grey or blackish, becoming black on tail,
except for broad white bases of all outer
rectrices; centre of upper breast bright rufous
(frequently concealed, occasionally lacking),
bordered by grey on breast side and lower breast,
flanks buffish, belly to undertail-coverts
whitish; iris brown; bill black; legs dark grey or
black. Female is similar to male, but has less
distinct white on forehead to over eye, paler face
pattern, duller orange patch on upper breast, and
slate-grey centre of lower breast. Olive-brownish
upperpart and rear crown hindneck, black cheek and
throat, white patch on the side of the trail are
what separates a male from a female which has a
pale slate-grey center of the lower breast.
Juvenile has head, upperparts and underparts
heavily spotted with buff, spots on scapulars
fringed darker, breast and flanks barred or
scalloped with darker fringes, flight-feathers and
tail as adult. There are 2 Sub-Species recognised
and there is much variation in plumage between
races, mainly in depth of plumage colour. . . . .
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…….. …………. It is found in the Indian
Subcontinent and South East Asia, ranging across
Bangladesh, Bhutan, Hong Kong, India, Laos,
Myanmar, Nepal, Thailand, and Vietnam. Its natural
habitat is subtropical or tropical moist montane
forests. Found in dense or open broadleaf forest,
mixed conifer and broadleaf forest, and thick
secondary scrub and edges; breeds at 2440 to 3800
mtrs in Himalayas and 1000 to 3000 mtrs in China.
In non-breeding season in similar habitat at lower
levels, generally below 2400 m, and more usually
below 1800mtrs; down to 915 mtrs in Nepal and 335
mtrs in Bhutan. It is a a short-distance migrant
and altitudinal migrant; after breeding, descends
to lower altitudes. . . . . . . .. .. …. …….
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…………. Food includes small invertebrates.
Usually solitary or in pairs. Forages in
undergrowth, occasionally on ground and in lower
and middle levels of forest trees. Generally
inconspicuous, perching low down, but not shy.
Flirts and spreads tail when alarmed. . . . . . .
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…….. …………. Its Song is a thin but
evenly spaced “zwi-chirr rri” or
“zreet-creet-creet-chirt-chirt”. Calls include
high-pitched upslurred “pee-tweet”, a chat-like
“tchuk-tchuk-tchuk”, a sharp, metallic “pink”,
also harsh “trrt”. . ……… … ….
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Description Credit – Birds of the World (The
Cornell Lab), Oiseaux, Animalia, Ogaclicks, Birds
of India | Bird World, Bird Count India &
Wiki.
image license
critique


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