Javan Munia (Lonchura leucogastroides)

Javan Munia (Lonchura leucogastroides). Indonesian-Bondol Jawa, Pipit, Emprit. Easy to watch this birds in Krapyak Wetan Jogjakarta. Sometime this birds is captured by hunters for food. You can eat fried munia in street stall (angkringan). The density this birds very high. This birds can be pests for farmers. So, farmers usually made orang-orangan to scary birds away from the ricefields. Some elaborate bird-scaring devices have been developed, using either wind power or a small boy sits in a raised hut in the middle of the field, pulling strings to activate rattles.

BIRDWATCHING IN KRAPYAK WETAN JOGJAKARTA

Birdwatching In Krapyak Wetan Jogjakarta



It located south side jogjakarta city (about 3,5 km). See http://wikimapia.com/ with html code

or
search by keyword “makam krapyak wetan”. Birdwatching in Krapyak Wetan
Jogjakarta I found several birds:




  1. Javan
    Munia (Lonchura leucogastroides)

  2. white-headed
    Munia (Lonchura maja)

  3. Eurasian
    Tree Sparrow (Passer montanus)

  4. White
    bellied Swiftlet (Collocalia esculenta)

  5. Olive-backed
    Sunbird (Nectarinia jugularis)

  6. Sooty
    headed bulbuls (Pycnonotus goiavier)



I use nude eye to see all that birds. So, many birds can be
loss to record. To identify the bird I use field guide book. John
MacKinnon Field Guide Book to the Birds
of Java and Bali is my choice. With compare my note, sketch and Field Guide
Book, I can make unmistakable to identify that birds. Date of birdwatching on
Sunday, o6 May 2007.


Technorati Profile

Bird Families (6)

Alcedinidae-Kingfishers and kookaburras:
The great variety of kingfishers is one of the real joys of birding in Indonesia, and their diversity in North Celebes and Halmahera is a major factor in the increasing popularity of this region. Kingfishers range in size from the huge Black-billed Kingfisher of Celebes and Shoved-billed Kingfisher of Papua to the diminutive dwarf kingfishers of western Indonesia and Celebes. (45 species)

Meropidae/Coraciidae-beeeaters and rollers:
The distinctive, triangular wings and chirping calls of bee-eaters grace most open country habitats in Indonesia. Rollers and dollarbirds are larger species and have spectular display flights. The endemic Purple-bearded Bee-eater and Purple-winged Roller are top attractions of Celebes (9 species).

Bucerotidae-hornbills:
These massive birds are an unmistakable and unforgettable feature of Indonesia’s forest. Diversity is highest in Sumatra and Borneo, where up to seven species can be seen at one site. Two species occur in Celebes, and Blyth’s Hornbill is the eastern representative of the group in north Mo;uccas and Papua. Horbills are absent from Lesser Sundas and South moluccas, except Sumba, which has an endemic of its own. (15 species).

Piciformes-barbets, woodpeckers and piculets:
The Piciformes are a western Indonesian family, with only two species, both woodpeckers, crossing Wallace’s line into Celebes. The monotonous tonk-tonk of barbets is a charecteristic rainforest sound, though getting views of these colourful, stocky birds can be neck-breaking. Some woodpeckers-the Crimson winged and other Yellownapes-are equally gaudy. (41 species)

Eurylaimidea-broadbills:
These boldly patterned and coloured birds, with their distinctive round heads and broad gapes, are confined to the rain forest of western Indonesia. They can be difficult to see, but the effort is well worthwhile. (8 species).

Pittidae-pittas:
Pitas are quail or partridge-sized ground birds of forest and secondary growth. The group most sought after by birders, they have it all: beuty of form and colour and an abilty to wind you up into frenzy of anticipation before they finally reveal themselves. Half the world’s species occur in Indonesia and four are endemic. (16 species).

Camppephagidae-cuckoo-shrikes, cicadabirds, trillers and minivets:
Another diverse group heaving with endemics, but, with the exception of the striking red-snd-black or yellow-and-black (female) minivets, they are rather boring grey or pied birds, field identification is difficult, mainly because they are hard to get worked up about and no one has yet sorted oout the various species in detail. (46 species)
Technorati Profile

BIRD FAMILIES (5)


Psittacidae-parrots, lories and allies:
East of wallacea’s line the forests resound with the screeches of parrots: Indonesia boasts no fewer than 30 endemic species. Most parrots are conspicuous and easy to identify, and the sight of a flock of cockatoos assembling for roost, red lories scorching over the florest canopy, or the exqusite, turquoise wings of a Great-billed Parrot catching the evening sun are some of the most enduring memories of a birding trip to Indonesia (72 species).


Cuculidae-cuckoos, koels and coucals:
This is another mega-diverse family in Indonesia comprising typical migrant and Asian Species, with several island endemics. The javan coucal has the distinction of being one of Indonesia’s most endangered bird, and the plaintive and Brush Cuckoos the most maddening, because of their persistent, annoying, ascending whistles and the difficulty of getting good views to tell them apart. (53 species).


Caprimulgiformes-owls, frogmouths, owlet-nighjars and nightjars:
If you want to make a name for yourself in birding circles, this is the group to focus on. The boobooks and scopsowls readily speciate on islands, as yet undescribe forms have been seen by birders on Timor and Sumba, and almost nothing is known about the Taliabu and Lesser Masked Owls of Moluccas. (66 species)


Apodiformes-swiftlets, swifts and tree-swifts:
The 12 species of swiftlet are among Indonesia’s commonest birds but are so difficult to identify that most birders do not bother. Tree-swifts are larger, wit long, scythe-shaped wings and forked tails; they sit around on exposed branches of forest trees. (24 species).


Trogonidae-trogons:
These beautiful and unobtrusive forest birds, with their black hoods, red or orange bellies and exquisitely vermiculated wing feathers, are quite common in lowland forests of Sumatra, borneo and Java. The Blue-tailed Trogon is an exception: it is a montane forest specialist with blue-and-yellow plumage. (8 species)
Taken from Jepson, P, 1997, Birding Indonesia, Periplus Editions. Singapore

BIRD FAMILIES (4)


Megapodiidae-megapodes:
Indonesia support all but five of the world’s 22 species. These extraordinary birds, which bury massive eggs in sand or large mounds of rotting vegetation, from which freeflying chicks emerge, are one of Indonesia’s greatest birding highlights. The black-and-white Maleo of Celebes is the most famous; the orange-footed Scrubfowl of Nusa Tenggara and Dusky Scrubfowl of North Moluccas are among the easiest to see strolling around the forest floor. (17 species)
Taken from Jepson, P, 1997, Birding Indonesia, Periplus Editions. Singapore

Phasianidae/Turnicidae: pheasants, quails and button quails:
Birders in Sumatra and Borneo invest considerable effort in catching up with the superb forest pheasants. Red Jungle-fowl, the ancestor of the domestic chicken, is locally common in Sumatra and Java, and the Green Peafowl’s range extends from Java into Nusa Tenggara. Only the button-quails’ range extends east of the Wallace line. (28 species)

Rallidae-rails, moorthens, and coots:
Rails are long-legged, mostly drably coloured birds that skulk around the margins of forest pools or marshes. They are favourites with birders, probably because they are a challenge to see, although, with a few notable exceptions such as the invisible Rail of Halmahera, they are easy to find in Indonesia compared with other countries in the region. (27 species).
Charadriiformes-waders:
Indonesia is good place to catch up with eastern paleartic species on their wintering grounds: they include Asian Dowitcher, Great Knot, Grey-tailed Tatler, Oriental Plover and Sharp-tailed and Terek Sandpipers. The largest concentarations of shorebirds are found on the river deltas of west Sumatra and north Java, but many birds are scattered in small groups along the eastern Indonesia coasts. Flocks of Red-necked Phalrope are common sight on the seas of moluccas and Lesser sundaes.

Stercorariidae/Laridae-skuas, gulls, terns and noddies:
The almost total absence of gulls is a striking feature of Indonesian Bird Life. Great Crested and Bridled Terns are the typical inshore species, but black-naped Terns are qute common around rocky coasts. In the northern winter flocks of Common Terns, mixed with Brown Noddies and often with couple of skuas in attendance, feed in the mangrove-fringed bays of the eastern islands. Whiskered and White-winged Terns are common over freshwater swamps. (26 species).

Columbidae-pigeons and doves:
Indonesia’s amazing vriety of pigeons-flocking green pigeons; delicate, long-tailed, warm brown and rufous coloured cuckoo-doves; magnificent imperial pigeons, whose deep calls reverberate through the island forests and mangroves of eastern Indonesia; gorgeously coloured friute-doves and the dainty ground-doves and famous crowned pigeons of Papua-will leave you with new depths of appreciation of this familiar bird family (91 species).