Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Great stone curlew

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Charadriiformes

Genus
  
Esacus

Higher classification
  
Esacus

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Burhinidae

Scientific name
  
Esacus recurvirostris

Rank
  
Species

Great stone-curlew FileThimindu 2009 09 27 Yala Great Stone Curlew 1JPG Wikimedia

Similar
  
Bird, Esacus, Stone‑curlew, Yellow‑wattled lapwing, Indian cormorant

The great stone curlew or great thick knee esacus recurvirostris male female with flight


The great stone-curlew or great thick-knee (Esacus recurvirostris) is a large wader which is a resident breeder in tropical southern Asia from India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bangladesh into South-east Asia.

Contents

Great stone-curlew Asia Mike Needham Photography

This species prefers gravel banks along rivers or large lakes, and also beaches. A single egg is laid in a bare scrape on the open shingle.

Great stone-curlew Great Stonecurlew Great Stone Plover

It is mainly nocturnal or crepuscular like other stone-curlews, but can frequently be seen foraging during the day, moving slowly and deliberately, with occasional short runs. It tends to be wary and flies off into the distance ahead of the observer, employing powerful, rather stiff wingbeats.

Great stone-curlew httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

The great thick-knee is a large wader at 49–55 cm, and has a massive 7 cm bill with the lower mandible with a sharp angle giving it an upturned appearance. It has unstreaked grey-brown upperparts and breast, with rest of the underparts whitish. The face has a striking black and white pattern, and the bill is black with a yellow base. The eyes are bright yellow and the legs a duller greenish-yellow.

In flight, the great thick-knee shows black and white flight feathers on the upperwing, and a mainly white underwing. Sexes are similar, but young birds are slightly paler than adults.

The call is a wailing whistle, given mainly at night, as with other birds in this family. The great thick-knee eats crabs, large insects, and other animal prey.

The great stone curlew


References

Great stone-curlew Wikipedia