Chestnut-capped babbler
The chestnut-capped babbler is a passerine bird of the family Timaliidae. It is monotypic within the genus Timalia.
Taxonomy
The chestnut-capped babbler is placed as the sole species in the genus Timalia. It is divided into six subspecies with the following distribution:- T. p. bengalensis – lower Himalayas
- T. p. smithi – northern Myanmar to southern China, northern Thailand and northern Indochina
- T. p. ''intermedia – central and southern Myanmar to southwestern Thailand
- T. p. patriciae – western part of the central plains of Thailand
- T. p. dictator – eastern and southeastern Thailand to southern Indochina
- T. p. pileata'' – Java
Related species
Description
The chestnut-capped babbler is a medium-sized babbler with a fairly long, wedge-shaped tail and a thick, black bill. The plumage is unbarred brown with characteristic head markings: a chestnut-coloured crown and black eye mask contrasting with a white forehead and white eyebrow line.Ecology
Distribution
This bird is native in Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Laos, Myanmar, Nepal, Thailand, and Vietnam.The Sukla Phanta Wildlife Reserve in Nepal represents the western limit of its distribution.