Bird Podcast

Shoba Narayan

Welcome to the Bird Podcast — hosted by Shoba Narayan.

  • 28 minutes 35 seconds
    Episode 76: Bird Behaviour with Rohan Chakravarty

    Rohan Chakravarty is a Cartoonist, illustrator, and wildlife buff. Creator of Green Humour, the comic strip. He is an author and illustrator known for his work in bridging art and science, particularly in the field of bird behavior. His book, "Bird Business," focuses on showcasing the quirks, antics, and daily lives of 100 Indian birds, offering insights into their unique behaviors.

    1. How does a cartoonist and illustrator think about birds? Can you walk us through the process of creating this book.
    2. How did you choose the birds that feature in your book?
    3. You are clearly interested in bird behaviour. You say, for instance, that the Lammergier- bearded vulture, takes 7 years to master its bone-throwing skill. These are very specific facts. How did you learn all this and how did you choose what to throw in. Rewrites? Anita's intervention?
    4. For those who haven't read your book, can you mention some of the fascinating bird behaviors that you have come across?
    5. Have you seen all the species in this book? Bar tailed treecreeper?
    6. Why do nuthatches move/spiral downwards while the treecreeper spirals upwards, do you know?
    7. Baya nesting colonies are usually built close to water bodies to reduce risk of predation by snakes— but aren't there water snakes? Do snakes not climb up trees?
    8. Why does the brown fish owl wade instead of doing the traditional thing that owls do?
    9. Bar-headed geese (raising the bar). How do you come up with puns? Because you are a cartoonist or a writer or both?
    10. What are your favourite species and why?
    11. What is your technique of going birdwatching, as in do you go every week? Favourite binocs? Or do you sit and draw outside?
    8 July 2025, 2:18 pm
  • 35 minutes 35 seconds
    Episode 75: Gynandomorphism in birds with Dr. Hamish Spencer

    The sex of a bird – whether it is male or female – is one of the most critical aspects of its biology. Males and females often behave differently, especially during the breeding season, and in many species, they have strikingly different plumages.

    This episode features Dr. Hamish Spencer, an evolutionary biologist at the University of Otago in southern New Zealand. Hamish was recently in Colombia, where he was shown a bird that violated these rules.

    Colombian ornithologist John Murillo had discovered a very unusual Green Honeycreeper (Chlorophanes spiza) on his farm near Manizales in Colombia and pointed it out to Hamish when he visited early in 2023. The bird exhibited aqua-blue male plumage on its right and grass-green female plumage on its left. The bird's head showed the black hood of a typical male on the right, but the left side was mostly green.

    This episode discusses this bizarre phenomenon, known as bilateral gynandromorphy. How did it affect this particular bird? How does it arise? How common is it? Which species has it been observed in?

    The article reporting this find has colour photos taken by John Murillo and is available at https://journal.afonet.org/vol94/iss4/art12/

    John Murillo's video can be seen at https://figshare.com/articles/media/DSCN2268_MOV/23739894

    21 March 2024, 2:25 pm
  • 7 minutes 44 seconds
    Episode 74: A pigeon's nest at home and its ripple effects

    When a pigeon comes into the house. This is a controversial episode. In fact, I am pretty sure nobody in the nature groups that I am part of will approve of this. In fact, they may even condemn this episode. Because you see, it is about pigeons, which birders call flying pests. But here's what happened and so, if you listen or watch this episode, advance apologies.

    About six months ago, a rock pigeon made a nest in my mother-in-law's balcony. This episode is about the ripple effects after that.

    One day, I returned after a long trip and visited my mother-in-law who lives in a separate apartment in my building to discover that a pigeon had laid two eggs on a chair that she uses to sit on in her balcony. My mother in law was quite delighted with this development. She lives alone and having a living creature inhabit her home gave her a lot of pleasure. The problem is that these feral pigeons– rock doves– are carriers of disease.

    Bird Podcast is one of the Top 20 science podcasts in India per Feedspot.

    11 March 2024, 8:24 am
  • 40 minutes 34 seconds
    Episode 73: Birds and Shola Forests with Dr. V.V. Robin
    18 January 2024, 2:22 pm
  • 9 minutes 10 seconds
    Special Episode: How did you get into birding

    Here is a special episode about how different Bangalore birding experts got into birding.

    23 November 2023, 12:18 pm
  • 18 minutes 19 seconds
    Episode 72: Birding in Mauritius
    13 November 2023, 3:02 pm
  • 10 minutes 19 seconds
    Episode 71: The biodiverse splendour of Bhutan

    This episode is about Bhutan: carbon-negative, Buddhist and a pioneer in sustainable tourism. This tiny country, about the size of Switzerland contains 774 species. In comparison, neighbouring India— nearly ten times the size— has just 1200 species. Here we talk to Namgay Tshering a freelance birding guide about the birds of Bhutan. Specifically he mentions the Beautiful Nuthatch, the Blyth's tragopan, the Himalayan Monal and others. He talks about how Eastern and Southern Bhutan are a haven for birdwatchers, perhaps because the main cities of Paro, Thimphu and Punakha are far from these locales. Watch this episode on Youtube for visuals of Bhutan.

    28 September 2023, 3:10 am
  • 6 minutes 45 seconds
    Episode 70: Toucanets and hummingbirds in Costa Rica

    In this episode, we talk to a resident naturalist about the motmots, hummingbirds and toucanets that you can see in Costa Rica.

    27 August 2023, 2:30 am
  • 11 minutes 38 seconds
    Episode 69: The Resplendent Quetzal of Costa Rica
    13 August 2023, 2:30 am
  • 33 minutes 31 seconds
    Episode 68: Delhi birds with Sudhir Vyas

    Delhi and its neighbourhoods, with its variety of habitats and landscapes, is remarkable for the wealth and diversity of its avifauna. It is a true haven for bird lovers, home to an astonishing array of over 470 captivating bird species. Get ready for an enchanting adventure with Sudhir Vyas's delightful book, "The Birds of the Delhi Area," which is the ultimate guide to unlocking the secrets of these feathered wonders! This book has been edited by Anita Mani under Indian Pitta- India's first imprint dedicated to birds.

    With over 50 years of bird watching experience, Sudhir Vyas, a former career diplomat, possesses an intimate understanding of Delhi's avian inhabitants. His expertise shines through numerous articles and studies on ornithology in the Delhi area. An invaluable resource for the rapidly growing community of bird watchers in Delhi and beyond, it explores the diverse avifauna of the region. Accompanying Vyas's words are the breathtaking photographs of by a number of bird photographers, including by Amit Sharma, a passionate wildlife and bird photographer, whose images comprise the bulk of the pictures that illustrate the book and bring the birds and their varied habitats to life.

    30 July 2023, 2:30 am
  • 9 minutes 7 seconds
    Episode 67: The three-wattled bell-bird, Monteverde, Costa Rica

    This is the first of three episodes about the bird life in Costa Rica.

    This one focuses on the three-wattled bell-bird and the episode is set in the Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve.

    Listen to the bellbird on Youtube here.

    Meet One Of The Loudest Birds In The World (Three-wattled Bellbird)

    Thanks to these photographers for their images

    https://unsplash.com/@zmachacek

    https://unsplash.com/@feiffert

    Thanks to Michael Brooks for this video of the bird calling

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Js9rqJZ_a-8&list=PPSV

    Featured image from Wikimedia Commons

    16 July 2023, 2:30 am
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