This bird was previously spotted in the buffer zone of Chitwan National Park on April 1, 1983.
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The ground-dwelling robin, a migratory bird, has been sighted in Nepal after 43 years. The bird was spotted on Saturday near the Narayani River in Amaltari, eastern Nawalparasi.
Nature guides Maan Chaudhary, Manish Mahato, Amrit Mahato, Dinesh Mahato and Kanchan Mahato saw the bird while observing the bird.
Senior ornithologist Dr. Hemsagar Baral said that this bird, which comes to India during the winter, stopped in Nepal to rest while returning to its nesting grounds to raise its young. He said that this bird may have stopped here on its way to China, Mongolia and Siberia.
A bird that stops for two to four days to rest or stay on the way to its destination through Nepal is called a ground-dwelling robin. It is a bird of the raven family that prefers to stay on the ground. It has been named ground-dwelling robin. It prefers to live in open fields, rocky areas and farmlands.
Earlier, the Ghazle Bhuin was first seen in the buffer zone of Chitwan National Park on April 1, 1983 by British ornithologist, writer and bird painter Clive Byers and British ornithologist Alan Adams. Since then, the bird has not been recorded in Nepal. Irish national Byers, the world-famous bird painter who first saw the bird in Nepal, died in Britain on March 4. Another ornithologist Adams has also died.
During the breeding season, the male part of the chick is blue-green, the face is black and the chest is pale orange. Wildlife photographer Sanjay Shrestha said that during the breeding season, the upperparts of the female are pale to yellowish brown, the throat is dark brown, and the tail is white. There are records of 903 birds in Nepal.
