







There
are an estimated 8,600 species of birds worldwide, and of these over 1,200,
or about 14%, may be found in the Indian subcontinent. A visit to an Indian
national park, therefore, may be unusually rewarding for the bird enthusiast.
Checklists are available for several of the most popular national parks in
India, including Corbett, Bandhavgarh, and Ranthambhore, as well as for Nepal's
Royal Chitwan. Unfortunately, there is no current, official checklist of the
birds of Kanha published by the park. However, during the 1980s Park Research
Officer P. C. Kotwal compiled a list of 163 species together with rather scanty
annotations. This document is available for public inspection at the Kanha
Museum. Curiously, H. S. Panwar devoted only two pages to the bird life of
Kanha in his Kanha National Park: A Handbook (1991). In 1986, Paul Newton,
Stanley Breeden, and Guy J. Norman published a more fully annotated listing:
see "The Birds of Kanha Tiger Reserve, Madhya Pradesh, India" in
Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society 83 (1986) 477-498. This list,
based on observations made between January 1980 and July 1983, included 225
species, a total that the authors regarded as aln10st certainly an underestimate.
This article still offers useful information.
updated, annotated list in the Journal of the BNHS, which will include in
excess of 235 species for the core area of Kanha as well as the buffer zone.
Kite,
is about the size of a Jungle Crow. It is much darker in colour and significantly
smaller than the other commonly seen buzzard of Kanha, the Honey Buzzard (Pernis
ptilorhyncus). The White-eyed Buzzard has a conspicuous white throat patch
and prominent white or yellowishwhite eyes. Like the Blackwinged Kite, it
favours dry, open areas and competes for the same prey, including lizards,
locusts, grasshoppers, crickets, and mice. Places to look for the White-eyed
Buzzard include Kanha Meadow and the open areas south of the Sulcum bridge
on Sijhora Road. The species is sometimes attracted to areas where controlled
grass burning is in progress because large numbers of insects are flushed
out.