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Crested honey buzzard

The crested honey buzzard (Pernis ptilorhynchus)[3] is a bird of prey in the family Accipitridae, which also includes many other diurnal raptors such as kites, eagles, and harriers. Pernis ptilorhynchus has six subspecies. As a medium-sized raptor, their size ranges between 57–60 cm (22–24 in). They are also known as the Oriental, Asiatic, or Eastern honey buzzard. The name is derived from its diet, which consists mainly of the larvae of bees and wasps extracted from honey combs.

Crested honey buzzard
Female in Mudumalai, India
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Accipitriformes
Family: Accipitridae
Genus: Pernis
Species:
P. ptilorhynchus
Binomial name
Pernis ptilorhynchus
(Temminck, 1821)
Synonyms
  • Falco ptilorhynchus Temminck, 1821[2]
  • Falco ptilorhyncus Temminck, 1822
Front view of male, Valparai, Tamil Nadu, India
In flight over Thane district, Maharashtra, India
Taking off after drinking at a pond, Bandhavgarh, India

Crested honey buzzards migrate for breeding to Siberia and Japan during the summer. They then spend the winter in Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent. They are also a year-round resident in these latter areas. They prefer well-forested areas with open spaces and are found from sea level up to 1,800 m (5,900 ft). Unusually for raptors, the sexes can be differentiated.

The species has several adaptations for its specialist diet. These include an elongated head for foraging on underground nests and a groove in the tongue for feeding on honey. A mass of short, dense feathers on the head and neck protect against stinging attacks by social wasps. Juveniles may have adopted Batesian mimicry to deter predators.

Taxonomy edit

The crested honey buzzard was obtained from the island of Java by the Dutch zoologist C.J. Temminck. He depicted and named it as Falco ptilorhynchus in March 1821.[2] Temminck's later text description submitted to the Bibliothèque Nationale in July 1823 used the spelling ptilorhyncus. Later, in 1839, Temminck used the spelling ptilorhynchus in the Tableau Méthodique.[4] Both Temmick's spellings have been used, for example Salim Ali used -cus while Grimmett and others used -chus.[5][6] Recently Dickinson and others have argued that the original spelling -chus must stand.[4]

The British Museum Catalogue of Accipitres published in 1874 by R. Bowdler Sharpe lists the names Falco ptilorhynchus (attributed to Temminck, 1823) and Pernis ptilorhynchus (attributed to J.F. Stephens, 1826). Sharpe was perhaps unaware that Temminck's early illustrations had scientific names on the wrappers of the parts (livraisons) of his work and he cited Temminck's later works. In 1874, the British Museum had 18 specimens of the crested honey buzzard and its Catalogue listed nine different species names of genus Pernis for these.[7]

The crested honey buzzard (Pernis ptilorhynchus) includes six subspecies, which are shown in the table below.

Subspecies of Pernis ptilorhynchus.[8]
Scientific name Authority Breeding range
P. p. orientalis Taczanowski, 1891 South Siberia to NE China and Japan
P. p. ruficollis Lesson, R, 1830 India and Sri Lanka to Myanmar, Vietnam and SW China
P. p. torquatus Lesson, R, 1830 Malay Peninsula, Sumatra and Borneo
P. p. ptilorhynchus (Temminck, 1821) Java
P. p. palawanensis Stresemann, 1940 Palawan group (SW Philippines)
P. p. philippensis Mayr, 1939 Philippines (except Palawan group and Sulu Archipelago)

Despite its name, the crested honey buzzard is not related to Buteo buzzards, and is taxonomically closer to the kites.[9]

Description edit

About 57–60 cm (22–24 in) in size, the crested honey buzzard is a medium-sized[10]: 82  raptor. The head lacks a strong superciliary ridge, giving it a facial appearance very unlike a raptor. It appears long-necked with a small head resembling that of a pigeon. It has a long tail and a short head crest. It is brown above, but not as dark as the European honey buzzard, and paler below. A dark throat stripe is present. Unusually for a large bird of prey, the sexes can be distinguished. The male has a blue-grey head with brown iris, while the female's head is brown and the iris is yellow. She is slightly larger and darker than the male. The male has two black bands in the tail and three black under wing bands, while the female has three black tail bands and four narrower black under wing bands. The juvenile has extensive black primary tips with narrower underwing bands. It has a yellow cere at the base of the bill, and a dark iris.[6] The colouration and the tail pattern of the species are highly variable.[5]

 
Oriental Honey Buzzard (dark morph), Bandipur National Park, India

In flight, it is likely to be mistaken at a distance for the short-toed snake-eagle. However, it can be distinguished by its slimmer head and longer neck. It is usually seen soaring singly or in pairs, or perched on a tree top. It is quiet even while nesting, sometimes uttering a single high-pitched screaming whistle.[5] In flight it has deep elastic beats and high upstrokes. It glides and soars on flat or slightly arched wings at right angles to the body. The long broad wings are well rounded at six-fingered tips. The tail is broad, of medium length with a rounded tip. The tail is shorter than the breadth of the wing bases. The wing span is 2.4 times total length in the Palearctic (Eurasian) subspecies, but 2.0–2.2 in the Indo-Malayan subspecies.[10]: 342–346 

The similarity in plumage between juvenile crested honey buzzards and the Nisaetus hawk-eagles may have arisen as a partial protection against predation by larger raptors. The eagles have stronger bills and talons, and are likely to be less vulnerable than the Pernis species. Similar mimicry is shown by the juvenile of the European honey buzzard, which resembles the common buzzard. Although the Eurasian Goshawk is capable of killing both species, it is likely to be more cautious about attacking the better protected Buteo species.[11] These are examples of Batesian mimicry,[citation needed] named for the English naturalist and explorer H.W. Bates who first reported such mimicry in the context of Lepidoptera (moths and butterflies) in 1861.

Distribution and habitat edit

The crested honey buzzard is a summer migrant to Siberia and Japan, wintering in tropical Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent. It leaves Siberia in late August and returns in May. The summer sojourn in Japan is April–May to mid-September.[10]: 342–346  Elsewhere, it is more or less resident. Crested buzzards that migrate from breeding areas in Japan to wintering areas in Southeast Asia fly over the East China Sea. This 700 km (430 mi) nonstop flight over water is possible because during autumn, winds over the sea blow in the same direction as the birds' direction of flight (i.e. wind support).[12]

The crested honey buzzard prefers well-forested lowland and hilly areas that are broken by open glades. In South and Southeast Asia it is sometimes found in small groves near villages. It is found from sea level to 1,500 m (4,900 ft), occasionally up to 1,800 m (5,900 ft). During migrations it goes above 3,000 m (9,800 ft).[10]: 342–346 

Behaviour and ecology edit

 
Roller coaster display of Pernis species

Diet edit

The crested honey buzzard is a specialist feeder, living mainly on the larvae of social bees and wasps, and eating bits of comb and honey.[13][14] It takes other small insect prey such as cicadas.[15] It occasionally eats small birds, reptiles and frogs like other raptors.[5]

Breeding edit

The crested honey buzzard breeds in woodland, and is inconspicuous except in the spring, when the mating display includes wing clapping. The display of roller coasting in flight and fluttering wings at the peak of the ascent are characteristic of the genus Pernis. It is as yet uncertain whether the roller coaster display is related to courtship.[10][16] The breeding season in the migratory range is June to mid-September for central Siberia and April to August in Japan. In India, it is April–June, though it starts in February in South India.[5][10]: 342–346 

The nest is a platform of sticks 40–80 cm (16–31 in) across, lined with dry or green leaves. It is located at a height of 10–28 m (33–92 ft) in conifers in the north, and 6–20 m (20–66 ft) in banyan, mango, casuarina or coconut in India. The female normally lays two eggs. The colour is variable, ranging from pale cream to chestnut brown. Incubation takes 4–5 weeks, the chicks are fledged in 5–6 weeks and they become independent after a further 58 weeks. Male and female share the responsibilities of rearing the young.[5][10]: 342–346 

Adaptations for diet edit

Unlike most of their relatives, crested honey buzzards prefer a diet of the larvae, pupae and honey combs of social wasps. In their summer breeding grounds in Japan, the birds dig up underground social wasp nests with their talons. The short toe depth and long talon on the second digit facilitate this behaviour. In addition, the long slender beak with a hooked tip, and the eyes set far back, are adaptations well suited for foraging in underground nests.[17] The tongue has a groove adapted for extracting larvae from the honey comb.[18] In the wintering regions in South Asia, crested honey buzzards are observed attacking social wasp nests in trees.[14]

 
Structure of a feather showing interlocking barbules. Adjacent barbules attach to one another via hook and node mechanism.

When foraging both underground and arboreal nests, the birds have to contend with stinging attacks by wasps. The feathers around the head and neck are well suited to repelling attacks. A study in 2016 by a British and a Japanese researcher compared the head and neck feathers of crested honey buzzards with those of the black kite (Milvus migrans) and grey-faced buzzard (Butastur indicus). These are similar raptors, but only the honey buzzard forages on wasp nests. The researchers found significant adaptations of the feathers. The honey buzzard has a dense mat of short feathers under its beak, around its eyes and nostrils and on its neck with barbules closer together. They are stiffer with more hooks and nodes for barbules to attach to one another, yielding an armour like appearance. In the other kites, the feathers are longer and softer, with fewer barbules towards the tips. Thus, more of the skin is exposed. The head and neck feathers of the crested honey buzzard are shorter, being only 50–70% the length of the feathers in the other two species.[17]

The crested honey buzzard may have also evolved a chemical defense. Its feathers were observed to have a white filamentous covering that is not present in black kites and grey-faced buzzards. Videos indicate that social wasps attack bears and other mammals more than they attack honey buzzards. Experiments indicate that the substance from the wings of honey buzzards renders wasps inactive. However, this is as yet speculative and the composition of the substance is yet to be determined.[17] In a wasp attack on two crested honey buzzards observed in Japan, the wasps mainly attacked the head and neck. Their stings were about 1 mm (0.039 in) in size. Most of the stings were embedded in the dense mat of feathers. A few stings pierced the skin where feathers were missing. Thus, the feather adaptations provided partial protection against wasp attacks.[17]

Threats and conservation edit

The IUCN status of the crested honey buzzard is least concern. The bird is inconspicuous and may be undercounted, except during migration. Rough estimates of the population range from 100,000 to 1,000,000.[10]: 342–346 

As climate change affects wind conditions worldwide, the wind support for migration over the 680 km (420 mi) migratory pathway over the East China Sea could be reduced. Japanese researchers have developed a mathematical model to estimate the effect of climate change on the favourable winds over this section. They predict a slight reduction in the migratory areas due to this wind change effect by the middle of the 21st century and a complete loss of the migratory pathway by late in the century. The study does not consider possible behavioural adaptations of migratory birds which could possibly compensate for the changing wind patterns.[19]

On the positive side, the species appears to be adapting to the availability of anthropogenic habitats. It has colonized irrigated forest plantations in some areas of Pakistan. It has recently spread to the Middle East and regularly winters in small numbers in Arabia. These birds may be migrating from Siberia using a pathway over Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan that is west of the Himalayas.[20]

Falconry as a hobby in Indonesia started in the 1970s. As Facebook is popular in Indonesia, it is used for the illegal sale of raptors. Two studies of a number of Facebook groups were conducted during 2015. In both studies combined, the total number of birds offered for sale was about 10,000. The most popular raptors were black-winged kite and changeable hawk eagle, accounting for about 39% of the 10,000. In contrast, crested honey buzzards accounted for only about 1%.[21][22]

In culture edit

In the Java island of Indonesia, people living in or near forested areas suffer from attacks, sometimes fatal, by giant honey bees. The local people and honey collectors blame the honey buzzards for these attacks. This raptor attacks the nests of the giant honey bee. As it flies away with a piece of the honeycomb in its claws, it is pursued by angry bees. The local belief is that as its escape strategy the honey buzzard flies close to humans in the vicinity to transfer the attack of the angry bees to the humans. However, in a study of the hunting behaviour of honey buzzards conducted between 2003 and 2019, no evidence of this strategy was observed by the researchers. They surmised that a decline in the habitat due to human activity has increased the conflict between bees and humans.[14]

References edit

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2016). "Pernis ptilorhynchus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T22694995A93483912. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T22694995A93483912.en. Retrieved 24 October 2021.
  2. ^ a b Dickinson, E.C. (2012). "The first twenty livraisons of Les Planches Coloriées d'Oiseaux of Temminck & Laugier (1820–1839): IV. Discovery of the remaining wrappers". Zoological Bibliography. 2 (1): 34–49.
  3. ^ "Pernis ptilorhynchus (Crested Honey Buzzard)". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 15 May 2016.
  4. ^ a b Dickinson, E.C.; Kamminga, P.; van der Mije, S. (11 Mar 2022). "Temminck's new bird names introduced in the early parts of the Nouveau recueil de planches coloriées d'oiseaux in 1820–22". Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club. 142 (1). British Ornithologists' Club: 75–91. doi:10.25226/bboc.v142i1.2022.a4. S2CID 247385754.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Ali, S. (2002). The Book of Indian Birds (13th ed.). New Delhi: Bombay Natural History Society Oxford University Press. pp. 11, 95. ISBN 0195665236.
  6. ^ a b Grimmett, R.; Inskipp, C. & Inskipp, T. (2011). Birds of the Indian Subcontinent. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 106–107. ISBN 9788193315095.
  7. ^ Sharpe, R.B. (1874). Catalogue of the Birds in the British Museum: Catalogue of the Accipitres, or Diurnal Birds of Prey, in the Collection of the British Museum. Vol. I. London: Trustees of the British Museum. pp. 347–349.
  8. ^ Gill, F.; Donsker, D.; Rasmussen, P., eds. (2020). IOC World Bird List. Vol. 10.2. doi:10.14344/IOC.ML.10.2.
  9. ^ Finlayson, C. (2011). Avian Survivors: The History and Biogeography of Palearctic Birds. London, UK: T & AD Poyser. pp. 121–132. ISBN 978-0-7136-8865-8.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h James Ferguson-Lees; David A. Christie; Kim Franklin; Philip Burton; David Mead (2001). Raptors of the World: An Identification Guide to the Birds of Prey of the World. HMCo Field Guides. ISBN 978-0-618-12762-7.
  11. ^ Duff, D.G. (March 2006). "Has the plumage of juvenile Honey-buzzard evolved to mimic that of Common Buzzard?" (PDF). British Birds. 99 (3): 118–128.
  12. ^ Nourani, E.; Yamaguchi, N. M; Manda, A.; Higuchi, H. (2016). "Wind conditions facilitate the seasonal water-crossing behaviour of Oriental Honey-buzzards Pernis ptilorhynchus over the East China Sea". Ibis. 158 (3): 506–518. doi:10.1111/ibi.12383.
  13. ^ Orta, Jaume; Marks, Jeffrey S.; Kirwan, Guy M. (2020). "Oriental Honey-buzzard (Pernis ptilorhynchus)". In Del Hoyo, Josep; Elliott, Andrew; Sargatal, Jordi; Christie, David; De Juana, Eduardo (eds.). Oriental Honey-buzzard (Pernis ptilorhynchus). doi:10.2173/bow.orihob2.01. S2CID 241314961.
  14. ^ a b c Kahono, S.; Prawiradilaga, D. M.; Peggie, D.; Erniwati; Sulistyadi, E. (2020). "First report on hunting behavior of migratory Oriental Honey-Buzzard (Pernis ptilorhynchus orientalis) towards migratory Giant Honeybee (Apis dorsata dorsata) (Hymenoptera: Apidae) on Java Island, Indonesia". Treubia. 47 (2): 123–132. doi:10.14203/treubia.v47i2.4005. S2CID 234426096.
  15. ^ Brues, Charles T. (1950). "Large Raptorial Birds as Enemies of Cicadas". Psyche: A Journal of Entomology. 57 (2): 74–76. doi:10.1155/1950/49542.
  16. ^ Gewers, G.; Curio, E.; Hembra, S. H. (2006). (PDF). Forktail. 22: 163–165. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2012-02-26.
  17. ^ a b c d Sievwright, H.; Higuchi, H. (2016). "The feather structure of Oriental honey buzzards (Pernis ptilorhynchus) and other hawk species in relation to their foraging behavior". Zoological Science. 33 (3): 295–302. doi:10.2108/zs150175. PMID 27268984. S2CID 21903642.
  18. ^ "Oriental Honey-buzzard". IIT Kanpur. Retrieved 29 Jan 2022.
  19. ^ Nourani, E.; Yamaguchi, N.M.; Higuchi, H. (2017). "Climate change alters the optimal wind-dependent flight routes of an avian migrant". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 284 (1854): 20170149. doi:10.1098/rspb.2017.0149. PMC 5443942. PMID 28469028.
  20. ^ Babbington, J.; Campbell, O. (2016). "Recent status and occurrence of Crested Honey Buzzards Pernis ptilorhynchus in the Arabian peninsula, with emphasis on Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates". Sandgrouse. 38 (1): 12–22.
  21. ^ Gunawan, A.P.; Noske, R.A. (20 June 2017). "The illegal trade of Indonesian raptors through social media". Kukila. 20: 1–11.
  22. ^ Iqbal, M. (June 2016). "Predators become prey! Can Indonesian raptors survive online bird trading?". BirdingASIA. 25: 30–35.

External links edit

crested, honey, buzzard, crested, honey, buzzard, pernis, ptilorhynchus, bird, prey, family, accipitridae, which, also, includes, many, other, diurnal, raptors, such, kites, eagles, harriers, pernis, ptilorhynchus, subspecies, medium, sized, raptor, their, siz. The crested honey buzzard Pernis ptilorhynchus 3 is a bird of prey in the family Accipitridae which also includes many other diurnal raptors such as kites eagles and harriers Pernis ptilorhynchus has six subspecies As a medium sized raptor their size ranges between 57 60 cm 22 24 in They are also known as the Oriental Asiatic or Eastern honey buzzard The name is derived from its diet which consists mainly of the larvae of bees and wasps extracted from honey combs Crested honey buzzard Female in Mudumalai India Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Accipitriformes Family Accipitridae Genus Pernis Species P ptilorhynchus Binomial name Pernis ptilorhynchus Temminck 1821 Synonyms Falco ptilorhynchus Temminck 1821 2 Falco ptilorhyncus Temminck 1822 Front view of male Valparai Tamil Nadu India In flight over Thane district Maharashtra India Taking off after drinking at a pond Bandhavgarh India Crested honey buzzards migrate for breeding to Siberia and Japan during the summer They then spend the winter in Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent They are also a year round resident in these latter areas They prefer well forested areas with open spaces and are found from sea level up to 1 800 m 5 900 ft Unusually for raptors the sexes can be differentiated The species has several adaptations for its specialist diet These include an elongated head for foraging on underground nests and a groove in the tongue for feeding on honey A mass of short dense feathers on the head and neck protect against stinging attacks by social wasps Juveniles may have adopted Batesian mimicry to deter predators Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour and ecology 4 1 Diet 4 2 Breeding 4 3 Adaptations for diet 5 Threats and conservation 6 In culture 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy editThe crested honey buzzard was obtained from the island of Java by the Dutch zoologist C J Temminck He depicted and named it as Falco ptilorhynchus in March 1821 2 Temminck s later text description submitted to the Bibliotheque Nationale in July 1823 used the spelling ptilorhyncus Later in 1839 Temminck used the spelling ptilorhynchus in the Tableau Methodique 4 Both Temmick s spellings have been used for example Salim Ali used cus while Grimmett and others used chus 5 6 Recently Dickinson and others have argued that the original spelling chus must stand 4 The British Museum Catalogue of Accipitres published in 1874 by R Bowdler Sharpe lists the names Falco ptilorhynchus attributed to Temminck 1823 and Pernis ptilorhynchus attributed to J F Stephens 1826 Sharpe was perhaps unaware that Temminck s early illustrations had scientific names on the wrappers of the parts livraisons of his work and he cited Temminck s later works In 1874 the British Museum had 18 specimens of the crested honey buzzard and its Catalogue listed nine different species names of genus Pernis for these 7 The crested honey buzzard Pernis ptilorhynchus includes six subspecies which are shown in the table below Subspecies of Pernis ptilorhynchus 8 Scientific name Authority Breeding range P p orientalis Taczanowski 1891 South Siberia to NE China and Japan P p ruficollis Lesson R 1830 India and Sri Lanka to Myanmar Vietnam and SW China P p torquatus Lesson R 1830 Malay Peninsula Sumatra and Borneo P p ptilorhynchus Temminck 1821 Java P p palawanensis Stresemann 1940 Palawan group SW Philippines P p philippensis Mayr 1939 Philippines except Palawan group and Sulu Archipelago Despite its name the crested honey buzzard is not related to Buteo buzzards and is taxonomically closer to the kites 9 Description editAbout 57 60 cm 22 24 in in size the crested honey buzzard is a medium sized 10 82 raptor The head lacks a strong superciliary ridge giving it a facial appearance very unlike a raptor It appears long necked with a small head resembling that of a pigeon It has a long tail and a short head crest It is brown above but not as dark as the European honey buzzard and paler below A dark throat stripe is present Unusually for a large bird of prey the sexes can be distinguished The male has a blue grey head with brown iris while the female s head is brown and the iris is yellow She is slightly larger and darker than the male The male has two black bands in the tail and three black under wing bands while the female has three black tail bands and four narrower black under wing bands The juvenile has extensive black primary tips with narrower underwing bands It has a yellow cere at the base of the bill and a dark iris 6 The colouration and the tail pattern of the species are highly variable 5 nbsp Oriental Honey Buzzard dark morph Bandipur National Park India In flight it is likely to be mistaken at a distance for the short toed snake eagle However it can be distinguished by its slimmer head and longer neck It is usually seen soaring singly or in pairs or perched on a tree top It is quiet even while nesting sometimes uttering a single high pitched screaming whistle 5 In flight it has deep elastic beats and high upstrokes It glides and soars on flat or slightly arched wings at right angles to the body The long broad wings are well rounded at six fingered tips The tail is broad of medium length with a rounded tip The tail is shorter than the breadth of the wing bases The wing span is 2 4 times total length in the Palearctic Eurasian subspecies but 2 0 2 2 in the Indo Malayan subspecies 10 342 346 The similarity in plumage between juvenile crested honey buzzards and the Nisaetus hawk eagles may have arisen as a partial protection against predation by larger raptors The eagles have stronger bills and talons and are likely to be less vulnerable than the Pernis species Similar mimicry is shown by the juvenile of the European honey buzzard which resembles the common buzzard Although the Eurasian Goshawk is capable of killing both species it is likely to be more cautious about attacking the better protected Buteo species 11 These are examples of Batesian mimicry citation needed named for the English naturalist and explorer H W Bates who first reported such mimicry in the context of Lepidoptera moths and butterflies in 1861 Distribution and habitat editThe crested honey buzzard is a summer migrant to Siberia and Japan wintering in tropical Southeast Asia and the Indian subcontinent It leaves Siberia in late August and returns in May The summer sojourn in Japan is April May to mid September 10 342 346 Elsewhere it is more or less resident Crested buzzards that migrate from breeding areas in Japan to wintering areas in Southeast Asia fly over the East China Sea This 700 km 430 mi nonstop flight over water is possible because during autumn winds over the sea blow in the same direction as the birds direction of flight i e wind support 12 The crested honey buzzard prefers well forested lowland and hilly areas that are broken by open glades In South and Southeast Asia it is sometimes found in small groves near villages It is found from sea level to 1 500 m 4 900 ft occasionally up to 1 800 m 5 900 ft During migrations it goes above 3 000 m 9 800 ft 10 342 346 Behaviour and ecology edit nbsp Roller coaster display of Pernis species Diet edit The crested honey buzzard is a specialist feeder living mainly on the larvae of social bees and wasps and eating bits of comb and honey 13 14 It takes other small insect prey such as cicadas 15 It occasionally eats small birds reptiles and frogs like other raptors 5 Breeding edit The crested honey buzzard breeds in woodland and is inconspicuous except in the spring when the mating display includes wing clapping The display of roller coasting in flight and fluttering wings at the peak of the ascent are characteristic of the genus Pernis It is as yet uncertain whether the roller coaster display is related to courtship 10 16 The breeding season in the migratory range is June to mid September for central Siberia and April to August in Japan In India it is April June though it starts in February in South India 5 10 342 346 The nest is a platform of sticks 40 80 cm 16 31 in across lined with dry or green leaves It is located at a height of 10 28 m 33 92 ft in conifers in the north and 6 20 m 20 66 ft in banyan mango casuarina or coconut in India The female normally lays two eggs The colour is variable ranging from pale cream to chestnut brown Incubation takes 4 5 weeks the chicks are fledged in 5 6 weeks and they become independent after a further 58 weeks Male and female share the responsibilities of rearing the young 5 10 342 346 Adaptations for diet edit Unlike most of their relatives crested honey buzzards prefer a diet of the larvae pupae and honey combs of social wasps In their summer breeding grounds in Japan the birds dig up underground social wasp nests with their talons The short toe depth and long talon on the second digit facilitate this behaviour In addition the long slender beak with a hooked tip and the eyes set far back are adaptations well suited for foraging in underground nests 17 The tongue has a groove adapted for extracting larvae from the honey comb 18 In the wintering regions in South Asia crested honey buzzards are observed attacking social wasp nests in trees 14 nbsp Structure of a feather showing interlocking barbules Adjacent barbules attach to one another via hook and node mechanism When foraging both underground and arboreal nests the birds have to contend with stinging attacks by wasps The feathers around the head and neck are well suited to repelling attacks A study in 2016 by a British and a Japanese researcher compared the head and neck feathers of crested honey buzzards with those of the black kite Milvus migrans and grey faced buzzard Butastur indicus These are similar raptors but only the honey buzzard forages on wasp nests The researchers found significant adaptations of the feathers The honey buzzard has a dense mat of short feathers under its beak around its eyes and nostrils and on its neck with barbules closer together They are stiffer with more hooks and nodes for barbules to attach to one another yielding an armour like appearance In the other kites the feathers are longer and softer with fewer barbules towards the tips Thus more of the skin is exposed The head and neck feathers of the crested honey buzzard are shorter being only 50 70 the length of the feathers in the other two species 17 The crested honey buzzard may have also evolved a chemical defense Its feathers were observed to have a white filamentous covering that is not present in black kites and grey faced buzzards Videos indicate that social wasps attack bears and other mammals more than they attack honey buzzards Experiments indicate that the substance from the wings of honey buzzards renders wasps inactive However this is as yet speculative and the composition of the substance is yet to be determined 17 In a wasp attack on two crested honey buzzards observed in Japan the wasps mainly attacked the head and neck Their stings were about 1 mm 0 039 in in size Most of the stings were embedded in the dense mat of feathers A few stings pierced the skin where feathers were missing Thus the feather adaptations provided partial protection against wasp attacks 17 Threats and conservation editThe IUCN status of the crested honey buzzard is least concern The bird is inconspicuous and may be undercounted except during migration Rough estimates of the population range from 100 000 to 1 000 000 10 342 346 As climate change affects wind conditions worldwide the wind support for migration over the 680 km 420 mi migratory pathway over the East China Sea could be reduced Japanese researchers have developed a mathematical model to estimate the effect of climate change on the favourable winds over this section They predict a slight reduction in the migratory areas due to this wind change effect by the middle of the 21st century and a complete loss of the migratory pathway by late in the century The study does not consider possible behavioural adaptations of migratory birds which could possibly compensate for the changing wind patterns 19 On the positive side the species appears to be adapting to the availability of anthropogenic habitats It has colonized irrigated forest plantations in some areas of Pakistan It has recently spread to the Middle East and regularly winters in small numbers in Arabia These birds may be migrating from Siberia using a pathway over Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan that is west of the Himalayas 20 Falconry as a hobby in Indonesia started in the 1970s As Facebook is popular in Indonesia it is used for the illegal sale of raptors Two studies of a number of Facebook groups were conducted during 2015 In both studies combined the total number of birds offered for sale was about 10 000 The most popular raptors were black winged kite and changeable hawk eagle accounting for about 39 of the 10 000 In contrast crested honey buzzards accounted for only about 1 21 22 In culture editIn the Java island of Indonesia people living in or near forested areas suffer from attacks sometimes fatal by giant honey bees The local people and honey collectors blame the honey buzzards for these attacks This raptor attacks the nests of the giant honey bee As it flies away with a piece of the honeycomb in its claws it is pursued by angry bees The local belief is that as its escape strategy the honey buzzard flies close to humans in the vicinity to transfer the attack of the angry bees to the humans However in a study of the hunting behaviour of honey buzzards conducted between 2003 and 2019 no evidence of this strategy was observed by the researchers They surmised that a decline in the habitat due to human activity has increased the conflict between bees and humans 14 References edit BirdLife International 2016 Pernis ptilorhynchus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2016 e T22694995A93483912 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2016 3 RLTS T22694995A93483912 en Retrieved 24 October 2021 a b Dickinson E C 2012 The first twenty livraisons of Les Planches Coloriees d Oiseaux of Temminck amp Laugier 1820 1839 IV Discovery of the remaining wrappers Zoological Bibliography 2 1 34 49 Pernis ptilorhynchus Crested Honey Buzzard Integrated Taxonomic Information System Retrieved 15 May 2016 a b Dickinson E C Kamminga P van der Mije S 11 Mar 2022 Temminck s new bird names introduced in the early parts of the Nouveau recueil de planches coloriees d oiseaux in 1820 22 Bulletin of the British Ornithologists Club 142 1 British Ornithologists Club 75 91 doi 10 25226 bboc v142i1 2022 a4 S2CID 247385754 a b c d e f Ali S 2002 The Book of Indian Birds 13th ed New Delhi Bombay Natural History Society Oxford University Press pp 11 95 ISBN 0195665236 a b Grimmett R Inskipp C amp Inskipp T 2011 Birds of the Indian Subcontinent London Christopher Helm pp 106 107 ISBN 9788193315095 Sharpe R B 1874 Catalogue of the Birds in the British Museum Catalogue of the Accipitres or Diurnal Birds of Prey in the Collection of the British Museum Vol I London Trustees of the British Museum pp 347 349 Gill F Donsker D Rasmussen P eds 2020 IOC World Bird List Vol 10 2 doi 10 14344 IOC ML 10 2 Finlayson C 2011 Avian Survivors The History and Biogeography of Palearctic Birds London UK T amp AD Poyser pp 121 132 ISBN 978 0 7136 8865 8 a b c d e f g h James Ferguson Lees David A Christie Kim Franklin Philip Burton David Mead 2001 Raptors of the World An Identification Guide to the Birds of Prey of the World HMCo Field Guides ISBN 978 0 618 12762 7 Duff D G March 2006 Has the plumage of juvenile Honey buzzard evolved to mimic that of Common Buzzard PDF British Birds 99 3 118 128 Nourani E Yamaguchi N M Manda A Higuchi H 2016 Wind conditions facilitate the seasonal water crossing behaviour of Oriental Honey buzzards Pernis ptilorhynchus over the East China Sea Ibis 158 3 506 518 doi 10 1111 ibi 12383 Orta Jaume Marks Jeffrey S Kirwan Guy M 2020 Oriental Honey buzzard Pernis ptilorhynchus In Del Hoyo Josep Elliott Andrew Sargatal Jordi Christie David De Juana Eduardo eds Oriental Honey buzzard Pernis ptilorhynchus doi 10 2173 bow orihob2 01 S2CID 241314961 a b c Kahono S Prawiradilaga D M Peggie D Erniwati Sulistyadi E 2020 First report on hunting behavior of migratory Oriental Honey Buzzard Pernis ptilorhynchus orientalis towards migratory Giant Honeybee Apis dorsata dorsata Hymenoptera Apidae on Java Island Indonesia Treubia 47 2 123 132 doi 10 14203 treubia v47i2 4005 S2CID 234426096 Brues Charles T 1950 Large Raptorial Birds as Enemies of Cicadas Psyche A Journal of Entomology 57 2 74 76 doi 10 1155 1950 49542 Gewers G Curio E Hembra S H 2006 First observation of an advertisement display flight of Steere s Honey buzzard Pernis celebensis steerei on Panay Philippines PDF Forktail 22 163 165 Archived from the original PDF on 2012 02 26 a b c d Sievwright H Higuchi H 2016 The feather structure of Oriental honey buzzards Pernis ptilorhynchus and other hawk species in relation to their foraging behavior Zoological Science 33 3 295 302 doi 10 2108 zs150175 PMID 27268984 S2CID 21903642 Oriental Honey buzzard IIT Kanpur Retrieved 29 Jan 2022 Nourani E Yamaguchi N M Higuchi H 2017 Climate change alters the optimal wind dependent flight routes of an avian migrant Proceedings of the Royal Society B 284 1854 20170149 doi 10 1098 rspb 2017 0149 PMC 5443942 PMID 28469028 Babbington J Campbell O 2016 Recent status and occurrence of Crested Honey Buzzards Pernis ptilorhynchus in the Arabian peninsula with emphasis on Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates Sandgrouse 38 1 12 22 Gunawan A P Noske R A 20 June 2017 The illegal trade of Indonesian raptors through social media Kukila 20 1 11 Iqbal M June 2016 Predators become prey Can Indonesian raptors survive online bird trading BirdingASIA 25 30 35 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pernis ptilorhynchus Image of Oriental Honey buzzard attacking a bee hive Taiwan 2018 Bird Ecology Study Group BESG National University of Singapore Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Crested honey buzzard amp oldid 1219702048, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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