Oriental Turtle Dove (Streptopelia orientalis) - Wiki Oriental Turtle Dove
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[Photo] Oriental Turtle Dove (Streptopelia orientalis) Date 14 April 2006. Author Ravi Vaidyanathan.
Copyright (C) 2006 Ravi Vaidyanathan Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the section entitled "GNU Free Documentation License". |
The
Oriental Turtle Dove (
Streptopelia orientalis) is a member of the bird family
Columbidae,
doves and pigeons.
It has two distinctive races, S. o. orientalis in the central Siberian taiga, and S. o. meena in open woodland in central Asia. Two white eggs, as for all pigeons and
doves, are laid in a twig nest in a tree.
Southernmost populations are resident, but most other
birds migrate south to winter in India, southeast Asia, and southern Japan. This species is a rare vagrant to northern and western Europe. S. o. orientalis occurs as a rarity in western Alaska and British Columbia.
This small species is very similar in plumage to its European counterpart, the
Turtle Dove. It is a little larger than that species, particularly in the case of orientalis, about the same size as a
Collared Dove. It shares the black and white striped patch on the side of its neck, but the breast is less pink, and the orange-brown wing feathers of
Turtle Dove are replaced with a browner hue, and darker centres.
The tail is wedge shaped, again like the
Turtle Dove, but S. o. orientalis has a grey tip to the tail. S. o. meena has a white tip to its tail like
Turtle Dove. The flight is more relaxed and direct than that of its relative. The call is quite different from the purr of the
Turtle Dove. It is a four-syllable her-her-oo-oo.
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