Advanced Search
World Species
Help
  • Home
  • Geography
  • ↓
    • AZE Sites
    • Biodiversity Hotspots
    • Climate Data
    • Ecoregions
    • Habitat Vegetation Classification
    • Important Bird Areas
    • Irreplacable Areas
    • Land Use
    • Protected Areas
  • Ecosystems
  • ↓
    • African Grasslands
    • Alaska Forest
    • Alaska Tundra
    • Antarctica
    • Australian Grasslands
    • Commanster
    • Coral Reef
    • Lake Michigan
    • Namib Desert
    • Northern Virginia
    • Rain Forest
    • More ...
  • Lists
  • ↓
    • Animal Cams
    • Animal Sounds
    • Cannibals
    • Common Species
    • EDGE Analysis
    • Emblems
    • Endangered Species
    • Invasive Species
    • Raptor Priority
    • Top 100 Endangered Species
  • Glossary
  • About

Diet Overlap

Pycnonotus cafer (Red-vented Bulbul)
Irena puella (Asian Fairy-bluebird)

Common Diet

Ficus drupacea (brown-woolly fig)
Ficus minahassae (clustertree)
Ficus thonningii (Chinese banyan)

Common Habitat

Brahmaputra Valley semi-evergreen forests
Buxa Tiger Reserve
Deccan thorn scrub forests
Eastern highlands moist deciduous forests
Himalaya
Himalayan subtropical broadleaf forests
Indo-Burma
Kudremukh National Park
Lower Gangetic Plains moist deciduous forests
Manas National Park
Meghalaya subtropical forests
Mizoram-Manipur-Kachin rain forests
Namdapha National Park
North Western Ghats moist deciduous forests
North Western Ghats montane rain forests
Northeast India-Myanmar pine forests
Northern Indochina subtropical forests
South Western Ghats moist deciduous forests
South Western Ghats montane rain forests
Sri Lanka lowland rain forests
Sri Lanka montane rain forests
Western Ghats and Sri Lanka
Xishuangbanna

Attributes / relations provided by
♦ 1"Fig-eating by vertebrate frugivores: a global review", MIKE SHANAHAN, SAMSON SO, STEPHEN G. COMPTON and RICHARD CORLETT, Biol. Rev. (2001), 76, pp. 529–572
♦ 2Foraging ecology of Red-vented Bulbul Pycnonotus cafer in Haridwar, India, DINESH BHATT and ANIL KUMAR, Forktail 17 (2001), p. 109-110
  Email © WorldSpecies.org 2020-2023