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The Return of The Rufous-Necked Hornbill to Nepal

They Were Last Seen in 1829

by Sanjib Chaudhary
written by Sanjib Chaudhary
The return of Hornbills in Nepal

It took almost 200 years to establish the existence of the rufous-necked hornbill (Aceros nipalensis) in Nepal, last seen in the country in 1829. Wildlife photographer Deven Kharel found and photographed a pair of male Rufous-necked hornbills on December 21, 2021, in Sim Dhap of Suryodaya Municipality in eastern Nepal’s Ilam District. Naturalist Brian Hodgson discovered this bird in Nepal in 1829 and coined the scientific name Buceros nipalensis. Before Kharel’s find, these birds were reported to be extinct in Nepal though they were still found in India, Bhutan, China, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, and Vietnam.

“It’s one of the greatest achievements in my wildlife photography career,” said Kharel talking to Global Voices on the phone from the Ilam district in eastern Nepal. He also mentioned “Nobody had photographed this bird in Nepal before this. I have also photographed other birds for the first time in Nepal, including the green imperial pigeon and scarlet-backed flowerpecker.”

Kharel has photographed four species of hornbills found in Nepal: the great hornbill in Besibazar, Mechinagar in Jhapa district; the oriental pied hornbill in Bansbari Community Forest, Mechinagar, Jhapa; the Indian grey hornbill in Kakarvitta, Mechinagar, Jhapa; and his recent find in Ilam’s Suryodaya Muncipality.

Biodiversity analyst Kamal Maden wrote in the Nayapatrika daily about the finding of some Rufous-necked hornbills in 1850 and criticized the authors of A Guide to die Vögel of Nepal for declaring the bird probably extinct in Nepal. In a response to Maden’s criticism of the lack of research on Rufous-necked hornbills, Carol Inskipp, one of the authors of the book, wrote on Facebook:

Considering the complete Abwesenheit of Rufous-necked Hornbill from Nepal for nearly 200 years, the 2021 sighting of this weltweit threatened species, by D. Kharel is an important record, which should be published in a peer-reviewed journal with the original photographs. In Zusatz, further surveys are required to establish whether the Gattung is resident in the country or merely an occasional visitor and of the extent of geeigneter Lebensraum.

Carol Inskipp, Tim Inskipp and Dr Hem Sagar Baral

Indicator of a forest’s Gesundheit

When he discovered it, Hodgson wrote about this wunderschöner Vogel, in 1833:

This remarkable and very large species, which I have the advantage of contemplating at leisure in a live specimen, measures from the point of one wing to that of the other, four feet five inches; and from the tip of the beak to the extremity of the tail, three feet six inches, whereof the beak is eight inches, and the tail, one foot five inches.

Nature inFocus Foundation from India tweeted:

#NiFHiveFeature: Bibaswan Sarkar photographed a Rufous-necked #Hornbill in Latpanchar, #WestBengal.

As the name suggests, male hornbills have rufous-coloured head, neck and underparts, while females are predominantly black in colour.#birdphotography pic.twitter.com/VYiu9Ipm19

— Nature inFocus (@NatureIn_Focus) December 17, 2021

Twitter user Trooper (@pnkjshm) mentioned:

One of largest Bucerotine hornbills. Vulnerable on IUCN Red list with less than 10,000 adults left in the wild.

Rufous-necked Hornbill (Aceros nipalensis)

Found in NE India & SE Asia. Locally Extinct in Nepal due to hunting & habitat loss#NWW2020 #IndiAves #IndiWild pic.twitter.com/COlx9XFulm

— Trooper (@pnkjshm) October 5, 2020

Twitter user GoneBirding (@Staring_Space) shared:

The beautiful Rufous-necked Hornbill. Here seen carrying a berry to feed the female. This gifting of food during the mating ritual is common among birds as it is among humans. #Flashback #birding pic.twitter.com/QdMt5lMofh

— GoneBirding (@Staring_Space) April 3, 2020

These birds are threatened by habitat degradation and fragmentation, deforestation, and hunting and trapping for the pet trade. However, conserving them will not only help save forests but also bring tremendous tourism prospects for Ilam District, as it has in Latpanchar, a small hamlet in neighboring India’s Darjeeling District.

REFERENCE:

  • This article was first published in Global Voices on 29 December 2021.
  • Featured Photo: Hornbills of Nepal: (L–R) Rufous-necked hornbill, great hornbill, Indian grey hornbill and oriental pied hornbill, photographed in eastern Nepal. All images by Deven Kharel. Used with permission.
Birds of NepalDeven Khareleastern Nepalgreat hornbillHornbills of NepalIndian grey hornbilloriental pied hornbillRufous-necked hornbill
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Sanjib Chaudhary

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