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Overview
Jerdon's nightjar

Jerdon's nightjar

Wikipedia

Jerdon's nightjar is a medium-sized nightjar species native to southern India and Sri Lanka. Formerly considered as a subspecies of the long-tailed nightjar, it is best recognized by its distinctive call which sounds like a wooden plank being beaten periodically with each note ending in a quaver. The common name commemorates Thomas C. Jerdon who described the species.

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Distribution

Region

South Asia

Typical Environment

Occurs in southern India and Sri Lanka in dry to moist woodland, scrub, and edges of deciduous forests. It frequents plantations, thorn scrub, riverine edges, and open clearings within forests. Often found near villages and agricultural mosaics where flying insects are abundant at dusk. It prefers broken cover where it can sally for prey along open tracks and clearings while retaining nearby concealment.

Altitude Range

0–1500 m

Climate Zone

Tropical

Characteristics

Size23–26 cm
Wing Span45–52 cm
Male Weight0.075 kg
Female Weight0.07 kg
Life Expectancy8 years

Ease of Keeping

Beginner friendly: 1/5

Useful to know

A cryptic, nocturnal nightjar of southern India and Sri Lanka, it often becomes most conspicuous by voice, a rhythmic, wooden knock-like series with each note ending in a slight quaver. By day it roosts on leaf litter or bare ground, relying on mottled plumage for camouflage. It typically nests on the ground without a constructed nest, laying eggs directly on soil or leaf litter.

Gallery

Bird photo
Bird photo
Bird photo
C. a. aequabilisSri Lanka

C. a. aequabilisSri Lanka

Behaviour

Temperament

nocturnal and secretive

Flight Pattern

buoyant with short rapid wingbeats and sudden glides

Social Behavior

Usually solitary or in pairs; roosts on the ground or on low branches by day. Nests are simple ground scrapes with 1–2 eggs, relying on camouflage rather than nest structure. Males perform display flights and vocalizations at dusk and during moonlit nights.

Migratory Pattern

Resident

Song Description

A repetitive series of wooden, percussive tok notes, each finishing with a slight quaver, delivered at steady intervals. Also gives soft churrs and chuck calls during displays, and wing-claps may accompany vocalizations.

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