The Legge's flowerpecker or white-throated flowerpecker is a small passerine bird. It is an endemic resident breeder in Sri Lanka. Males have dark blue-grey upperparts with white tips on outer tail feathers (less apparent in female), white throat and upper breast. Females are generally paler with grey-olive upperparts. Can be seen in pairs or in small family parties.
Can be misidentify with Purple-rumped Sunbird by its short, stout bil. One of the difficult bird to photograph as its continuously in the move and also move very quickly.
Location : Sinharaja Forest Reserve - Sri Lanka
Name: Legge's flowerpecker | white-throated flowerpecker
Endemism : Endemic resident breeder in Sri Lanka
Scientific name : Dicaeum vincens
Conservation status: Near Threatened (Population decreasing)
Ashy-headed Laughingthrush (Endemic bird to Sri Lanka)
The ashy-headed laughingthrush is a rangy bird, 23 centimetre (9 in) in length with a long floppy tail. It is rufous brown above and deep buff below, with a grey head and white throat. Like other babblers, these are noisy birds, and the characteristic laughing calls are often the best indication that they are present, since they are often difficult to see in their preferred habitat.
I manged to photograph this bird in
Sinharaja Forest Reserve. One of my favorite shots as I mange to get the isolated bird with a clear background.
Location : Sinharaja Forest Reserve - Sri Lanka
Name: Ashy-headed Laughingthrush
Endemism : Endemic resident breeder in Sri Lanka
Scientific name : Argya cinereifrons
Conservation status: Vulnerable
The orange-billed babbler also known as Ceylon rufous babbler or Sri Lankan rufous babbler is an endemic to Sri Lanka. Commonly found in largely undisturbed forests.
Always in small groups busily working their way through foliage of trees and under story. I was lucky enough to observe this mother feeding the baby and capture this unique moment.
Location : Sinharaja Forest Reserve - Sri Lanka
Name: Orange-billed babbler | Ceylon rufous babble | Sri Lankan rufous babbler
Endemism : Endemic resident
breeder in Sri Lanka
Scientific name : Turdoides rufescens
Conservation status: Near Threatened (Population decreasing)
National bird of Sri Lanka with amazing colors and quite difficult bird to photograph as it moves fast on the turf. I manage to capture this beautiful bird at Horton Plains National Park as he walks down on a small foot path near the wildlife bungalow (inside the park) that we stayed.
The Sri Lankan junglefowl, also known as the Ceylon junglefowl, is a member of the Galliformes bird order which is endemic to Sri Lanka, where it is the national bird. It is closely related to the red junglefowl, the wild junglefowl from which the chicken was domesticated
Location: Horton Plains National Park - Sri Lanka
Name: Sri Lankan Junglefowl (Male)
Endemism : Endemic to Sri Lanka
Scientific name: Gallus lafayettii
Conservation status:
Least concern