Masked
Finfoot - elusive bird of the Sundarbans, Bangladesh
by M. Monirul H. Khan, from OBC Bulletin 38, December
2003.
It was dusk when I was coming back to my research camp after
surveying for signs of tiger in the mangroves of the Sundarbans
of Bangladesh on 17 January 2003. I was on a small
boat in one of the creeks, during the low tide, facing a rising
full moon in the sky. My attention was captured by the romantic
reflection of the moon on the water. The fronds of the Nipa Palm Nypa
fruticans - very similar to that of the Coconut Palm
- were 'clapping' in the breeze coming in from the Bay of Bengal,
making a mystical kind of music. Suddenly, among the trunks of
the nipa, foraging along the bank, I spied a grebe-like bird.
It was the size of a duck, but the enveloping darkness made it
difficult to see clearly. I took out my camera, attached a flashgun
to it, and started approaching closer in the boat. The bird was
smart. It walked up to the muddy bank and stood silently inside
a bush, as though challenging my patience. I told my boatman
to move the boat away a bit so that the bird might reappear.
It only took twenty minutes. The bird came down to the water
and started looking for food again. I started following it, waiting
for an opportunity to see it in open water.
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Masked Finfoot
(Martin Hale) |
Half an hour later,
when all the potential locations of food had been checked out,
the bird started swimming across the creek to the opposite
bank, finally allowing me the good look that I had been waiting
for.
In the flooding moonlight, I easily recognised the bird - a
female Masked Finfoot Heliopais personata. I
immediately focused the lens and released the shutter. The sudden
flash from
the flashgun terrified the bird and it half-ran, half-flew
on the water surface, uttering a harsh 'keek-keek-keek' call,
and
disappeared from sight. From my previous observations, I knew
that the Masked Finfoot prefers to feed in the late afternoon
and early morning, during the low tide, but this was the first-ever
observation of its feeding in darkness. The species's diet
mainly comprises of aquatic insects, small crabs, etc.
The Masked Finfoot is one of the rarest and least known birds
in the world and is only found in a few pockets of wetland habitat
in the Oriental Region. (1)
On the Indian Subcontinent, it is
found only in the Sundarbans and in parts of Assam. In Bangladesh,
the only site where this bird is found is the Sundarbans. It
has been classified as a 'scarce'(2) or 'fairly common'(3)
species. Previous reports on the occurrence of this species in
the northern,
eastern and coastal regions of Bangladesh (4) were probably
hypothetical. (1) This elusive species has a very small, declining
population as
a result of loss and degradation of wetlands and lowland forests.
Globally, it has been categorised as a Vulnerable species by
the IUCN, (5) while in Bangladesh it is an Endangered species.(6)
The Masked Finfoot is a brownish bird with yellowish bill and
legs. The male has a prominent black throat and foreneck while
the female has a white throat and foreneck surrounded by a
prominent black border.
Perhaps the best habitat for the species in its global range
are the mangroves of the Sundarbans - a tidal swamp of about
10,000 km2 in the Ganges-Brahmaputra delta of Bangladesh and
India. Based on my field observations I estimate that there might
be a few hundred birds living in the Sundarbans. The species
avoids strong sunlight and hence is rarely seen. Most of my sightings
were of solitary individuals, but a small number of pairs was
also seen with females being more commonly encountered than males.
Birds were usually seen in the same creeks, indicating that they
are probably territorial. They rarely fly, and when they do,
it is only a few feet above the water. The flight, however, is
very fast. When alarmed, the species prefers to hide in the bushes
on the bank of the creek and on a few occassions I was able to
observe birds resting inside these bushes, sitting on the ground,
in this manner.
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Masked Finfoot
(M. Monirul
H. Khan) |
The breeding of this species is poorly known on the Indian
Subcontinent. It has been described both as a resident and
as a winter visitor. (7,8) Although I did not see any nest, I
did
see them all through the year (most likely the same individuals).
I am sure that they are resident birds, at least in the Sundarbans.
From my interviews with the local people, I came to know that
a young man had found a nest of the Masked Finfoot in Ghagramari,
northern Sundarbans, in the monsoon (June/July) of 1999. The
nest was in a dense forest, on a dead tree slightly above the
creek. There were eight longish, ashy-white eggs with small
dark blotches. He had collected the eggs and attempted to hatch
them
by using a domestic hen to incubate them. Four out of the eight
eggs had hatched. The hatchlings were yellow with a slight
black tinge. However, they died soon afterwards.
It appears that the Masked Finfoots of the Sundarbans are safe,
because there is no major threat to them or their habitat. However,
the population should be monitored regularly. There is an urgent
need to study the ecology and behaviour of this elusive species
in order to achieve the baseline information necessary for its
long-term management.
References
- BirdLife International (2001) Threatened birds of Asia: the
Birdlife International Red Data Book. Cambridge: BirdLife International.
- Thompson, P. M. and Johnson, D. L. (1996) Birding in Bangladesh:
a guide to birdwatching sites and a checklist of birds. Dhaka:
unpublished report.
- Hussain, Z. (1993) The management of the Sunderbans forest,
Bangladesh. In: Wetland and waterfowl conservation in South
and West Asia (Eds. Moser, M. and van Vessem, J.). WRB Special
Publication No. 25, AWB Publication No. 85. pp.132-135.
- Rashid, H. (1967) Systematic list of the birds of East Pakistan.
Asiatic Society of Pakistan (Publication No. 20).
- Hilton-Taylor, C. (Compiler) (2000) 2000 IUCN red list of
threatened species. Gland and Cambridge: IUCN.
- IUCN Bangladesh (2000) Red book of threatened birds of Bangladesh.
Dhaka: IUCN Bangladesh.
- Grimmett, R., Inskipp, C., and Inskipp, T. (1998) Birds of
the Indian Subcontinent. Delhi: Oxford University Press.
- Harvey, W.G. (1990) Birds in Bangladesh. Dhaka: The University
Press Limited.
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