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 birding...

         Bhutan

 







Long-tailed Broadbill Psarisomus dalhousiae ©Laurence Poh http://www.laurencepoh.com/

The bird habitats of Bhutan can be roughly divided into forest, scrub, wetlands, alpine habitats, agricultural land & that land around human habitation.

Unlike other Himalayan countries, Bhutan still retains much of its forest intact. The country`s forests are rich, diverse & beautiful, forming some of the best remaining representatives of forest habitats in the Himalayas. Forests & bushes support the highest proportion (84%) of the country`s breeding birds. In addition 57% of Bhutan`s globally threatened birds & 90% of the country`s restricted-range birds are dependent on forests.

Subtropical & warm broadleaved forest grows along the foothills up to 1,200m. Globally threatened Rufous-necked Hornbill is virtually confined to these forests & requires mature fruiting trees. It is common in Bhutan but rare & declining elsewhere in its range. The endangered species, the Beautiful Nuthatch is rare & poorly known and has been found only in Bhutan in warm broad-leaved forest. These forests are also important for the enigmatic Chestnut-breasted Partridge that is both internationally threatened & restricted in distribution. Other species with restricted ranges, such as Yellow-vented Warbler and White-naped Yuhina are almost confined to subtropical & warm broad-leaved forests. These are also the main habitat of Broad-billed Warbler & Rufous-throated Wren Babbler.

Cool broad-leaved forest grows on moist exposed slope up to 2,900m above the warm broad-leaved forests. They are second only to the subtropical & warm broad-leaved forests in their bird species richness. Globally threatened Chestnut-breasted Partridge and Blyth`s Tragopan have been found here, the latter in the far east. Wood Snipe, an altitudinal migrant, probably winter in the cool broad-leaved forests.

Two globally threatened wetland species occur regularly in Bhutan - The rare White-bellied Heron breeds & frequents only those rivers & lakes in dense broad-leaved forests below 1,400m, and Pallas`s Fish Eagle (which has bred) inhabits larger rivers below 1400m. Typical species breeding along rivers & streams are kingfishers, fork-tails, dipper, wagtails, blue Whistling-Thrush & White-capped Water Redstart.

Phobjikha valley, in central Bhutan, is an important wintering ground for Black-necked Cranes, Black-tailed Crake & Ruddy-breasted Crake which are found in wetlands in spring & summer.

Bhutan has a diverse avifauna. 616 species have been recorded so far & many more are likely to be found as more people visit the country to see its birds. Around 464 species are resident although some of these are augmented by winter visitors that breed further north. Some residents are sedentary throughout the year, whilst others undertake irregular movements, either locally or more widely in the region, moving around according to the abundance of their food supply.

About 40 species are summer visitors or partial migrants to Bhutan & that include species such as cuckoos, swifts, bee-eaters, warblers, flycatchers & drongos. The migration routes of a number of these summer migrants are unknown. Many species winter further south in the subcontinent including Common Hoopoe, Barn Swallow and Ashy Drongo. Other species such as the White-throated Needletail & Asian Emerald Cuckoo, move southeast, perhaps as far as Malaysia & Indonesia, although Bhutanese birds may not travel so far. The Lesser Cuckoo winters in Africa.

Around 50 species are known to over winter in Bhutan. These include ducks, waders, birds of prey, thrushes, finches & buntings.

14 species recorded in Bhutan have been identified as globally threatened by BirdLife International. These include White-bellied Heron, Pallas`s Fish Eagle, Chestnut-breasted Partridge, Blyth`s Tragopan, Wood Snipe, Dark-rumped Swift, Rufous-necked Hornbill, Grey-crowned Prinia and Beautiful Nuthatch, all of which probably breed in Bhutan. The country is an important wintering ground for another internationally threatened species - the Black-necked Crane. Greater-spotted Eagle is a rare passage migrant, Baer`s Pochard, Imperial Eagle and Hodgson`s Bushchat are regular vagrants.

Offer of the week!

I would like to offer a 10% discount for PROACT members who would like to visit Bhutan for Birdwatching. The tours will be managed by Bhutan LhaYul Tours and Travels. Their website is at http://www.lhayul.com

  contributor

 

Jigme Tsering
Managing Director - Bhutan Lha-Yul Tours & Travels
(Thimphu, Bhutan)
lhayul@druknet.net.bt
http://www.lhayul.com/

  numbers

 
Number of bird species:616

  useful reading

 

* Field Guides & Bird Song

For a comprehensive list of recommended titles covering Asia as a whole - please see the Asia page of Fatbirder

A Field Guide to the Birds of Bhutan

Carol Inskipp, Tim Inskipp and Richard Grimmett Series: CHRISTOPHER HELM IDENTIFICATION GUIDE SERIES 192 pages, 70 col plates, col photos, maps, b/w line illus. Christopher Helm 2004
ISBN: 071366990X
Buy this book from NHBS.com

A Photographic Guide to Birds of India

[Including Nepal, Sri Lanka, the Maldives, Pakistan, Bangladesh & Bhutan] Bikram Grewal, Bill Harvey and Otto Pfister 512 pages, 850 col photos, 800 maps. Christopher Helm
ISBN: 0713664037
Buy this book from NHBS.com

Birds in Bhutan: Status and Distribution

Peter Spierenburg 383 pages, maps, illus. Oriental Bird Club 2005
ISBN: 0952954516
Buy this book from NHBS.com

Birds of Bhutan

Salim Ali, Biswamoy Biswas and S Dillon Ripley Series: RECORDS OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SURVEY OF INDIA 136 250 pages, b/w photos, tabs, map. Zoological Survey of India 1996
ISBN: 62224
Buy this book from NHBS.com

  useful information

 

Proact


Coordinator: none (why not apply?) see http://www.proact-campaigns.net/coordinators
Members: 1
Join us at http://www.proact-campaigns.net/team

  trip reports

 

Travelling Birder
http://www.travellingbirder.com
The Travellingbirder.com birding trip report search engine guides you to 7,000+ birding trip reports on the Internet. You can search for trip reports from a specific country and time of year. Not all these reports are in English. So, if you can’t find the trip report you want on this Fatbirder page… give them a try!

1995 [January] - Niels Poul Dreyer

http://www.camacdonald.com/birding/tripreports/Bhutan95.html
In January 1995, I joined a Ben King Bird Tour to Bhutan. The trip was designed to give the 7 participants a thorough coverage of a cross section of Bhutan from Paro in the west to Deothang in the east. The trip took 19 days and we saw 275 species of birds in Bhutan. Birds seen in India are not included in this report. The time of year was elected in order to see wintering birds. It was mainly clear and frosty in western Bhutan, while it was cold, overcast, foggy and rainy at Lingmithang and Tashingang. However, I would recommend to visit Bhutan in spring from late March to May, and hope I will get such an opportunity.

2000 [March] - Tom and Margot Southerland - Western Bhutan

http://www.camacdonald.com/birding/tripreports/Bhutan00.html
The Kingdom of Bhutan, a predominately Buddhist country in the Himalayas situated between India and China (Tibet); is the size of the combined US states of Vermont and New Hampshire. The Bhutanese have long called their country Druk Yul (translated as Land of the Thunder Dragon). To us and members of our group, our visit was a delightful step back in time to a place where there are no TV channels (but yes to video rentals); few telephones, no cell phones, no stoplights and the people are helpful, friendly and wave back to visitors. And, the majority of Bhutanese still wear their handsome native dress, the gho for men and the kira for women. The other dress commonly seen is the maroon robe worn by Buddhist monks ranging in age from young boys to old men...

2001 [May] - John Penhallurick

http://www.birdtours.co.uk/tripreports/bhutan/bhutan1/bhutan2001.htm
We were a day late starting the trip as Druk Air, who have a monopoly on flying into and out of Bhutan cancalled their flight on 12 May. More seriously, the Indian Army had mounted a major offensive against the rebel groups in the Northeast, who promptly faded across the border into Southern Bhutan...

2002 [March] Simon Boyes

http://www.birdtours.co.uk/Ornitholidays/bhutan.htm
...There are drongos and a White-throated Kingfisher on the hotel roof; Green Bee-eater and Jungle Babblers beside the swimming pool; and Ashy Prinia creeping along a fence with a Tailorbird. A small, shallow pool that we discover as we turn left out of the Centaur gate has plenty of waders, such as stilts, Marsh and Wood Sandpipers, Temminck`s Stints and a successful breeding colony of Little Ringed Plovers, judging from the number of juveniles. A Yellow-wattled Lapwing - much less common than the red version - is on the dry flat area straight outside the gate. There is much more too, but this brief account has to stop short of listing it all...

2004 [May] - John McAllister

http://www.anytimetours.co.uk
The participants were the Chicken Chasers (Birders who had Red Jungle Fowl as a major target species) - John McAllister and Elize McAllister of Wakkerstroom, South Africa and Jo Johnson of Cape Town, South Africa and the Culture Vultures (the Non-birders) - Shirley and Lisa Johnson of Cape Town, South Africa...

2004 [May] - Peter Lobo

http://www.allindiabirding.com/trip_reports_peter_lobo_bhutan.html
In May 2004, I explored hot spots of Bhutan, in association with our Bhutan Partner Rainbow Tours & Treks, with a view to improving our birding tours in Bhutan...

2005 [April] - Paul Prevett & Candy McManiman

http://www.birdtours.co.uk/tripreports/bhutan/bhutan2/Bhutan-Narrative-2005.htm
Just as certain bird species tend to appear again and again on birders’ most-wished-for lists, so special parts of the world have become widely coveted dream destinations. An example of a country that has emerged relatively recently to fire birders’ imaginations in this way is Bhutan...

2005 [May] - Dave Farrow

http://www.birdquest.co.uk/tripreports.cfm?trip=360
...this year’s tour was just awesome in the quality and quantity of birds seen! We saw six Himalayan Monals, 15 Blood Pheasants, four male Satyr Tragopans (three of them on the road!) and 21 Kalij Pheasants of two races. We found seven species of wren babbler, including Bar-winged, Wedge-billed and Long-billed Wren Babbler, five species of scimitar babbler, six species of parrotbills, Golden-breasted and Yellow-throated Fulvettas, Long-billed, Plain-backed and Long-tailed Thrushes...

2006 [April] - Dave Farrow

http://www.birdquest.co.uk/reportFiles/BHUTAN%20REP%2006.pdf
Pdf

2007 [March] - Mark Finn - Birdwatching Breaks

http://www.birdwatchingbreaks.com/Bhutan_TripReport07.htm
This was the second Birdwatching Breaks tour to Bhutan nestling in the shadow of the mighty Himalayan mountain chain. March is a good month to visit as we had a wide range of wintering species in addition to migrants from further south. Highlights were many but included Himalayan Monal, Blood Pheasant, Ibisbill, Rufous-necked and Wreathed Hornbills, Wood Snipe, Beautiful Nuthatch, Rufous-throated Wren Babbler, Cutia, a wide range of laughingthrushes and scimitar babblers and mixed flocks of migrant warblers...

  tour operators

 

Bhutan Bird Quest

http://www.bhutanbirdquest.com
Bhutan Bird Quest prides itself as being the only operator in Bhutan specializing exclusively in birding tours. Bhutan Bird Quest's founder Yeshey Dorji is a renowned professional bird photographer. His works have appeared in BirdAsia Magazine and several birding websites and in 2008 he will release his first book of photographs, Bhutan Birds

Bhutan Footprints Travel

http://www.tourbhutantravel.com/
We provide specialized historic highlights with well-organized transportations, accommodations, and impressive treks in the tranquil Himalayas, in a professional and dependable manner....

Bhutan Lha-Yul Tours & Travel

http://www.infohub.com/TRAVEL/SIT/sit_pages/9841.html
Bhutan has been identified as one of the 10 bio-diversity hot spots in the world and as one of the 221 global endemic bird areas. Its eco-system has some of the most exotic species of the Eastern Himalayas with an estimated 770 species of birds and over 50 species of rhododendron, along with an amazing variety of medicinal plants and orchids. Around 464 species of birds are resident although some of these are augmented by winter visitors breeding north. Among them are the Black-Neck Cranes which migrate to Bhutan every winter from Central Asia.

Bhutan Majestic Travel

http://www.bhutanmajestictravel.com/bhutan-tours/
The highlight of this trip is the Festival for the Endangered Black Necked Crane. By legend the cranes are believed to be the reincarnated souls of Lamas that come to pay homage at the monastery of Gangtey Gompa. Each year at the cranes return it is said that they circle the monastery three times before landing in the wetlands below. The Festival is sponsored each year by the Royal Society for the Protection of Nature and the Phobjikha Valley community. Foreign guests are asked to make a small donation for attending the festival...

Birding Pal

http://www.birdingpal.org/Bhutan.htm
Local birders willing to show visiting birders around their area...

Jachung Travel

http://www.jachungtravel.com/
Jachung Travel is a Bhutanese-owned, San Francisco-based tour company offering cultural tours and trekking in Bhutan, in cooperation with its partner, White Lake Adventures, a professional, licensed tour operator in Bhutan. We promote good travel ethics and respect for the environment and culture while making sure that you enjoy your adventure and that you experience Bhutan to the fullest. Through us you will learn about the Bhutanese culture, expand your mind, and leave with the feeling that you`ve had a unique, unforgettable experience. We hold ourselves to the highest standards and provide the best services possible, with the goal of giving you the adventure of your life.

Nature Tourism Bhutan

http://www.infohub.com/outfitters/117.html
Welcome to Nature Tourism-Bhutan. The company founded by Karma Jamtsho in 1999...

  other links

 

Bhutan - The Last Shangri-La

http://www.pbs.org/edens/bhutan/a_birds.htm
The Himalayas in general are an ornithological paradise: Nepal has more than 800 species, Sikkim and Bhutan more. Depending upon whose tally one adheres to, this compares favorably with the 1,200 to 1,800 species found in the entire Indian subcontinent. The abundance of birdlife reflects the extent of the diversity of life zones and habitats, as well as the central position of the Himalaya between two major biogeographical zones...

Bhutan Environmental Conservation

http://members.tripod.com/~Tshewang/index.html
In 1988 Bhutan was identified by Norman Myers as one of the ten biodiversity hot spots in the world. It has also been identified as the centre of 221 global endemic bird areas. Bhutan`s ecosystem harbours some of the most exotic, endemic species of the eastern Himalayas. It has an estimated 770 species of birds, and over 50 species of rhododendron. The mountains brim with other exotic species like the blue poppy and different medicinal herbs. Animals like takins, snow leopards, golden langurs, tigers and elephants roam its forests.

Birds of Bhutan

http://hometown.aol.com/bhutanbirds/myhomepage/business.html
The bird habitats of Bhutan can be roughly divided into forest, scrub, wetlands, alpine habitats,agricultural land & around human habitation. Unlike other Himalayan countries, Bhutan still retains much of its forest intact. The country`s forests are rich, diverse & beautiful, forming some of the best remaining representatives of forest habitats in the Himalayas. Forests & bushes support the high proportion of 84% of the country`s breeding birds. In addition 57% of Bhutan`s globally threatened birds & 90% of country`s restricted-range birds are dependent on forests.

The Road Between Ura and Limithang in Eastern Bhutan

http://www.orientalbirdclub.org/publications/bullfeats/bhutan.html
Bhutan has recently cracked its door ajar, permitting birders to sample some of its truly sumptuous avian delights...

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