Like never
before I saw number of Little Cormorants during my recent visit to Vedanthangal Bird Sanctuary, about 80 km from here. These birds are very commonly found in
the water bodies around Chennai, but not in numbers that’s uncountable.
Vedanthangal invites lot of birds from across the globe but this time little
cormorants took large numbers into the account.
The Little Cormorants are a
member of the cormorant family of seabirds, slightly smaller than the Indian
cormorant; it lacks a peaked head and has a shorter beak. The bird sized
between 50 to 55 cm in length and weighing up to 530 grams is widely
distributed across the Indian Subcontinents and extends east to Java, where it
is sometimes called Javanese cormorant.
The bird looks entirely back in
the breeding season but the plumage is brownish and the throat has a small
whitish patch in the non-breeding season. It forages single or sometimes in
loose groups in lowland freshwater bodies, including small ponds, large lakes,
streams and sometimes coastal estuaries. Like other cormorants, it is often
found perched on the waterside with its wings spread out after coming out of
the water.
Little cormorants produce low
roaring, grunting and groaning sounds comprising low pitched ah-ah-ah and
kok-kok-kok’s. They swim underwater to capture fishes and propel themselves
using their webbed feet. But the captured fishes are often brought up to the
surface to swallow them and during that time others birds including their
fellow cormorants, painted storks and egrets may attempt to steal them.
Linking this post for Saturday Critters
Linking this post for Saturday Critters