The Sri Lankan Black Headed ibis
The black-headed ibis or Oriental
white ibis (Threskiornis
melanocephalus) is a species of wading bird of the ibis family Threskiornithidae which breeds
in the Indian Subcontinent and Southeast Asia from northern India, Bangladesh, Nepal and Sri Lanka east up to Japan. It builds a stick
nest in a tree and lays 2–4 eggs.
It
occurs in marshy wetlands inland and on the coast, where it feeds on various frogs and fish and other water creatures, as well as
on insects. It walks about actively on
marshy land probing with its bill into soft mud and often feeds in shallow
water with its head momentarily submerged. Like storks and Spoonbills, it lacks
a true voice-producing mechanism and is silent except for peculiar ventriloquial
grunts uttered when nesting.
Adults
are typically 75 cm long and white plumaged with some greyer areas on the
wings. The bald head, the neck and legs are black. The thick down curved bill is
dusky yellow. In breeding, plumage some salty grey on scapulars and in wings
and ornamental plumes at base of the neck. Sexes are similar, but juveniles
have whiter necks and a black bill.
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