When we first arrived at Keoladeo NP, my brothers-in-law, Stan and David, and I moved along a road toward our motorized rickshaw. Our wives left with the van to check into our hotel. From the road, our guide Ashok pointed into a large tree and said "gray hornbill." I kind of dismissed it, "Oh, I've seen them before," but I went over and took a few photos. I keep forgetting that in birding, geography is important. It turns out that the Indian gray hornbill which I was being introduced to is quite a bit different than the African gray hornbill I'd previously seen on several occasions. This has happened to me a number of times. I see a bird that looks very familiar and dismiss it as a bird I've seen before, then learn it is a new species I've not seen before with very subtle or not-so-subtle differences. Geography, even relatively short distances, such as in the Galapagos Islands, can work changes in similar birds. And Africa to India is a little more distant than the different islands are from each other in the Galapagos!
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| Indian gray hornbill in Keoladeo NP. |
The Indian gray hornbill is a silvery-gray and white hornbill with a long and graduated tail with a light tip. The male has a blackish bill and narrow casque, with a protruding front edge. The bill tip and much of the lower mandible are pale yellow. There is bare gray skin around the eyes and the eyes are reddish-brown. The female is smaller, the casque is less prominent, and the eyes are browner.
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| Illustration of a female from Birds of the World. |
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| Illustration of a male from Birds of the World. |
To be honest, I don't see the difference between the male and female, except for the eye color. Based on the eye color, the Indian gray hornbill I saw was a male. Below, I have photos of African gray hornbills, the first one in Etosha NP in Namibia and the second from Kidepo Valley NP in Uganda. Differences in the bill and casque, alone, make them quite distinguishable from the Indian version.
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| Range map for the Indian gray hornbill from Birds of the World. |
One interesting note, it frequently competes with the rose-ringed parakeet for nest-holes and will even eat the parakeet's chicks and throw out the nest lining.













































