The stunning Himalayan bluetail
or Himalayan red-flanked bush-robin (Tarsiger rufilatus) is a small passerine
bird that was previously classified as a member of the thrush family Turdidae.
The Bluetail bird is now more generally considered to be an Old World
flycatcher of Muscicapidae. Though presently under review, this taxon is not
current recognized as a species by BirdLife international.
The Bluetail bird is a
short-distance altitudinal migrant species, which breeding in mixed coniferous
forest with undergrowth at 3,000 to 4,400 m altitude in the Himalaya and
wintering at 1,500 to 2,500 m. It is insectivorous and it is closely related to
the red-flanked bluetail and was usually treated as a subspecies of it in the
past, but as well as differing in its migratory behavior (the red-flanked bluetail
is a long-distance migrant), it also differs in the more intense blue color of
the adult males and the greyer color of the females and juveniles.
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