Although Nepal covers only a fraction of 1 per cent
of the earth’s land mass, it contains over 800
species of birds, about a tenth of the world’s
known birds, and of these more than half are found
within the national park. The reasons for Nepal’s
great wealth of birds are mainly topographical. First,
the country has a huge variation in altitude within
a short lateral distance, so that conditions range
from tropical to arctic in a distance of less than
100 miles; and second, Nepal lies in the region of
the overlap between the Palaearctic realm to the north
and the Oriental to the south.
Chitwan, with its dense forests, grasslands, rivers,
swamps and lakes, provides a multitude of habitats
for birds. Each provides a different type of food
and shelter. Even within the same habitat, different
birds feed selectively, minimizing competition for
food. The Park is a paradise for birds and birdwatchers
alike.
Many birds are regarded as residents because they
live in the Park all year round; others visit only
in summer, often to breed. Another group are the winter
visitors which descend from mountainous regions to
spend the cold months in a more hospitable climate.
Migratory birds also use the Park during spring and
autumn when resting on their journeys to northern
breeding grounds or southern wintering areas.
Possibly the most spectacular of all Chitwan’s
birds is the common peacock. His brilliant plumage
and magnificent tail, particularly when it is erected
into a great circular fan during courtship displays,
are an impressive sight. In spite of his long, trailing
tail, the peacock often flies into tall trees, announcing
his presence with a loud, trumpeting call. Groups
of the comparatively drab, gray-brown females are
often disturbed in grassy areas near forest edges
as they search for insects, small snakes and geckos,
fruits or green shoots.
Its seems remarkable that well over half of the birds
listed for Nepal should be found here, the reason
is that the park’s heterogeneous environment
provides a multitude of ecological niches for birds
to exploit. For instance, the river systems and associated
bodies of water contain a wide assortment of aquatic
fauna and flora, while the forest and grasslands provide
flowers, nectar, fruits and seeds, as well as the
ubiquitous insects.
Chitwan supports a poor population of fishing raptors.
All the same, ospreys, cormorants, darters, fishing
eagles, mergansers, fish owls and white-tailed sea
eagles hunt medium-to-large fish, and gulls, terns
and kingfishers take smaller ones. Besides fish, the
rivers, marshes and lakes support a wide array of
crustaceans, mollusks, frogs, tadpoles, worms, aquatic
insects and so on, which are preyed upon by herons
and storks (both also take fish), bitterns, waders
and crakes. Moorhens, cranes, ducks and geese feed
on the same things, but are also vegetarians to a
greater or lesser extent, eating roots, tubers and
seeds of aquatic plants. The greylag and barheaded
geese, teals, pintails, spotbills and garganey are
largely plant-feeders and partial to cultivated fields,
as are the common and demoiselle cranes. On the other
hand, the hand goldeneye and the tufted duck are believed
to be more depended on animal food.
Birds of prey (including owls) hunt small mammals,
birds, eggs and nestling, besides reptiles and insects.
Vultures maintain sanitation in nature by scavenging.
Green pigeons are fruit-eaters, and their smaller
relatives, the doves, are grain and seed-eaters. Parakeets,
which are a bit of both, do much damage to crops and
orchards. Sparrows, munias, buntings and weavers feed
on grass seeds, and sunbirds live on the nectar of
flowers.
Hornbills, barbets, orioles, mynas and bulbuls subsist
mainly on fruit, but supplement their diet with insects.
The reverse may be true for many of the remaining
birds. Insects are hawked in the air by bee-eaters,
swifts, swallows, martins and drongos; woodpeckers
and nuthatches search for them on tree trunks, and
wall creepers on vertical cliffs.
Pittas scan through leaf litter, forktails hunt forest
streams, and wagtails prey upon insects along the
stream and river beds. Bush chats, babblers, shrikes
and prinias control insects in the grasslands, together
with the rare rubythroat and the bluethroat, prefer
to stay on the ground. Others such as minivets and
allies, flycatchers, leaf warblers and cuckoos hunt
insects in the forest canopies.
Red-billed blue magpies may be seen at the tiger
kills early in the mornings, and the dark kite and
the house sparrow live alongside man. Elsewhere flowerpeckers
are closely associated with mistletoe fruit. Jungle
mynas ride on rhinos, and often flocks of them betray
the presence of the pachyderms in tall grass. The
mynas benefit by feeding on insects that fly off the
vegetation as the clumsy giants crash through it.
Similarly, egrets and pied mynas accompany grazing
herds of cows and buffalo. While some birds are highly-specialized
feeders, others tend to be omnivorous in varying degrees.
At the apex of the avian food chain are the birds
of prey, and apart from the vultures, which congregate
in large numbers at a carcass, they are usually seen
singly or in pairs. The ways in which evolution has
adapted these birds of prey for a life of hunting
or scavenging can be seen in the make up of their
wings, tails, feet, beaks and eves.
In over a hundred species of birds that are seen
in Chitwan, the males differ from the females in appearance.
Yet the differences, although pronounced in some,
are only minor in others. As a general rule, males
are more brilliantly colored and therefore more attractive:
minivets, peafowl, junglefowl, parakeets, sunbirds,
woodpeckers, green pigeons, most ducks and flycatchers
- are all good examples. In the great majority of
our birds, however, both sexes look alike.
Courtship display - an integral part of pair-formation
- varies as widely as do the species themselves. From
January to May the spectacular dance of the peacock
is a common sight in Chitwan: the male raises his
tail- feathers vertically into a huge fan, with the
iridescent moons facing forward, and pivots back and
forth in a graceful pavane. Scarcely less impressive
are the displays of the egrets during the monsoon.
These slender, longlegged white herons raise and lower
their feathers, forming white sprays round their crests
and bodies, and thereby making themselves still more
striking. Another of the great sights of spring is
the flight display of the crested serpent eagle. Twisting
and turning and rolling in the air, each pair performs
thrilling aerobatics.
By late April most of our winter birds have gone,
while others have arrived for nesting. As the breeding
season begins, songsters fill the air with lovely
melodies, and after dark the nightjars, owls and cuckoos
sing all night long. In short, the males are competing
with other males for mates, but that is not the whole
story. The female painted snipe and common bustard-quail
are larger and slightly brighter-colored than the
male.
Most of our wintering ducks and waders are Trans-himalayan
migrants, their breeding grounds extending as far
north as Siberia and the Arctic circle. Some annual
migrants travel vast distances. Yet many birds are
merely regional migrants, and do not travel long distances.
The paradise flycatchers and the black-naped monarch
flycatcher arrive for breeding in summer from within
the Indian subcontinent. Wintering leafwarblers and
flycatchers such as orange-gorgetted, rufous- breasted,
rusty-breasted, little pied and slaty blue, are said
to breed higher up in the Himalayas, and are therefore
latitudinal migrants. Still other birds use Chitwan
only for a brief stopover on their way to or from
their breeding grounds. These include the demoiselle
crane, sooty flycatcher, curlew and spot winged stare.
This include above 2
nights 3 days package.