The White-breasted Water Hen had
been a resident of my former neighborhood in Thiruvanmiyur, Chennai, was stayed
with its family. The open vegetation opposite to our then apartment provided
shelter to the water hens along with other species of birds and reptiles, but I
have seen only the adult hen (may be a female) which come flew or leap on our
compound wall to feed on the gains left by us to the birds and go back quickly
as possible hiding among the bushes. I was happy to capture the water hen
couple of times while it came feeding on the compound wall and only my mom had
seen her with juveniles since I can’t lookout the compound wall, about 5 feet
height.
As we shifted houses, I don’t
know what happened to the water-hens since the vegetation was cleared and an
apartment on construct right now wanted me to think they immigrated somewhere. The White-breasted Water-hen is a water bird of the rail and crake
family (Rallidae) that widely distributed across Southeast Asia and the Indian Subcontinent. It is
a large and distinctive rail species with dark grey upper-parts and flanks and
conspicuous white under parts, from which the species gains its common name. The
beak of the bird is yellowish with a reddish base, which becomes more olive
outside of the breeding season.
The water-hen has long legs,
colored in yellowish with large feet and legs dangled in flight. The female birds are
generally smaller than the male, with a somewhat duller beak, while juveniles
have duller plumage with the white of the under parts tinged brown and a darker
beak and legs. This species is
described as being very noisy during the breeding season, producing a loud call
consisting of various grunts, roars, quacks and chuckles, followed by a
repeated kru-ak, kru-ak,
kru-ak-a-wak-wak. The bird
feed on the ground had varied diet including insects, worms, small fishes and
grass seeds and roots and shoots of marsh plants.
(Source of info net)
(Source of info net)
Nature never ceases to amaze me with its color-combinations and variations in design.
ReplyDeletewhat a beauty it is! these are great shots, jeevan!
ReplyDeleteYou are a very erudite young man. This is a bird I have never heard of. I didn't start 'birding' until I was 50. I thought it was an old persons hobby but I was so wrong. Even children love to spot and name the birds they see. I liked the part about the legs dangling in flight, much like our herons.
ReplyDeleteNice photos!
ReplyDeleteGreat shots of bird in the neighborhood.
ReplyDeleteI have not seen this bird. It looks good - the first two pics have come very well. I too wonder where they might have migrated - the urban constructions keep pushing fauna out.
ReplyDeleteDestination Infinity
Thanks for the interesting information about the water hen. Your photos are wonderful.
ReplyDeleteWow - How gorgeous!
ReplyDeleteHi There, The water hen is a gorgeous bird --and you captured it really good with your camera...
ReplyDeleteI always wonder what happens to the birds (and other critters) when they come around here and clear a lot in order to build another home... Poor little birds ---they lose 'their' home.
Hugs,
Betsy
Beautiful bird and pictures. I have never seen this bird here before! Nice!
ReplyDeleteIt is interesting to watch any bird, esp. if they are rare. Keep photographing them!
Good photos.
ReplyDeletekarthik amma