• June 3, 2025
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Precious Gold Nugget of Hill Forests – The Golden Babbler, Male
The Golden Babbler is a plump, splendid
Golden-Coloured, small babbler. Apart from a
dark-streaked crown and small black mask, this
bird is bright golden-yellow all over. Inhabits
hilly and montane forests with dense undergrowth,
as well as bushy secondary growth. Frequently
joins mixed-species flocks. A fidgety and not easy
Babbler species, that is always a nightmare to
freeze for photographers.
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The Golden Babbler is a chunky relatively small
babbler measuring around 10 to 12 cm in length and
weighing about 6 to 10 gms. A distinctive small
babbler with narrowly striped crown, black
half-mask and yellow underparts. Nominate race has
crown and nape golden-yellow, narrowly and evenly
streaked with black, with strong yellow preocular
lateral crownstripe bordering black on lores and
short black supercilium; upperparts
yellowish-olive, upper­wing and tail
brownish-grey, flight-feathers with narrow
yellow-buff fringes; short black submoustachial
stripe from lores, plain yellowish-olive
ear-coverts; chin to mid-belly bright yellow,
shading on sides and below to olive-yellow; iris
red or red-brown to brown or brown-grey; bill
blackish, paler below, often with pinkish-red or
pinkish-flesh base of lower mandible; legs pale
yellowish-brown to light brown. Both Sexes are
similar. The Juvenile is duller and browner above
than adult, whiter below, with browner flanks.
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The Golden Babbler occurs from the foothills of
the Eastern Himalayas to South East Asia and
inhabits subtropical lowland and montane forests.
Found mostly in broadleaf evergreen forest, bamboo
stands, also dense bushes, Rubus thickets,
deserted cultivation and clearings; also secondary
forest, pine forest and upper montane primary
vegetation in Sumatra. Found at 300 to 2600 mtr in
Indian Subcontinent. Resident, apparently with
some seasonal wandering; in North East India
described as occasional migrant.
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The Golden Babbler feeds on insects, including
ants, caterpillars; occasionally berries. Forages
in lower to middle storeys. Outside breeding
season (from Aug) found in mixed flocks with Old
World warblers and other species of babbler, often
The Grey Throated Babbler, or in family groups;
sometimes in monospecific flocks.
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Their Song is a rapid “tu tu-tu-tu-tu-tu-tu” or
slower “ti tu-tu-tu-tu-tu”, or “chink
chink-chink-chink-chink-chink”, usually with 5 to
10 notes and lasting 1 to 1·25 seconds;
like that of The Rufous Fronted Babbler but notes
tend to be clearer, often sounding more spaced,
and usually with more obvious pause (occasionally
no pause) after first note. Introductory notes
sometimes given singly. When alarmed, utters
scolding “chrrrrr-rr-rr”, “chrirrrrr” or
“chrrrrrr”.

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Description Credit – Birds of the World (The
Cornell Lab), Oiseaux, Birda, Animalia, Birds of
India | Bird World, Bird Count India & Wiki.
image license
critique


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