Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Paddyfield Pipit

Anthus rufulus

Description:

This is a large pipit at 15 cm, but is otherwise an undistinguished looking bird, mainly streaked grey-brown above and pale below with breast streaking. It is long legged with a long tail and a long dark bill. Sexes are similar. Summer and winter plumages are similar. Young birds are more richly coloured below than adults and have the pale edges to the feather's of the upper parts more conspicuous with more prominent spotting on the breast. The population waitei from northwestern India and Pakistan is pale while the population malayensis from the Western Ghats is larger, darker and more heavily streaked with nominate rufulus intermediate.

Notes:

In winter some care must be taken to distinguish this from other pipits that winter in the area, such as Richard's Pipit, Anthus richardi and Blyth's Pipit, Anthus godlewskii. Paddyfield Pipit is smaller and dumpier, has shorter looking tail and has a weaker fluttering flight. The usually uttered characteristic "chip-chip-chip" call is quite different from usual calls of Richard's Pipit (explosive "shreep") and Blyth's Pipit (nasal "pschreen"). Tawny Pipit has less streaking on the mantle and has a black loreal stripe and a longer tail. The Western Ghats population can appear very similar to the Nilgiri Pipit

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

11 Comments

Sachin Zaveri
Sachin Zaveri 12 years ago

Thanks Emma,

Hema  Shah
Hema Shah 12 years ago

wow!

Sachin Zaveri
Sachin Zaveri 12 years ago

Thanks aubrieoates

aubrieoates
aubrieoates 12 years ago

Paddyfiel pipit

Sachin Zaveri
Sachin Zaveri 12 years ago

Ohh, Thanks, :D

AnjaliAnantharam
AnjaliAnantharam 12 years ago

Nice catch !

Sachin Zaveri
Sachin Zaveri 12 years ago

Thanks Yogesh, Satyen for helping out,

Wild Things
Wild Things 12 years ago

Very confusing, Sachin. Going by the location, Paddyfield Pipit seems to fit better.

YogeshSave
YogeshSave 12 years ago

Sachin I think this one is Paddyfield Pipit....

Sachin Zaveri
Sachin Zaveri 12 years ago

Thanks Satyen,
Blyth's Pipit or Paddyfield Pipit

Wild Things
Wild Things 12 years ago

Lovely spotting. Blyth's Pipit?

Sachin Zaveri
Spotted by
Sachin Zaveri

Ahmedabad, Gujarat, India

Spotted on Jan 19, 2012
Submitted on Jan 23, 2012

Related Spottings

Anthus pratensis Meadow pipit Water Pipit Water Pipit

Nearby Spottings

Yellow Wagtail White Wagtail Citrine Wagtail Stonechat (female)

Reference

Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team