- Spilornis minimus redirects here. For the species Nicobar Serpent Eagle, see Spilornis klossi.
- Spilornis cheela
Identification
Medium large raptor about 55-75cm in length.
Adult
- Dark brown upperparts and head
- Hooded appearance at rest
- Pale brown underparts and underwing coverts
- Appears large-headed and owl-like due to face s hape and position of eyes
Flight
- Shallow dihedral in soaring flight
- Tail and flight feathers black with broad white stripes
Distribution
Southern Asia. Widespread and generally common from northern India south to Sri Lanka east to southern China, Hainan, Taiwan and the southern Ryukyu Islands and south to the Andaman Islands and Malay Peninsula. Also breeds on Palawan, Borneo, Sumatra, Java and many smaller islands.
Taxonomy
About 20 subspecies are currently recognised, some of which may be deserving of full species status. Nominate race is found in northern India, melanotis in southern India, spilogaster in Sri Lanka and davisoni in the Andaman Islands. S. c. burmanicus occurs from Burma to central and southern Indochina, ricketti in south-east China and northern Indochina, rutherfordi on Hainan, hoya on Taiwan and perplexus in the southern Ryukyu Islands. Further south race malayensis is found in southern Burma, Malaysia and northern Sumatra, batu on Batu Island and southern Sumatra, sipora on the Mentawi Islands and Sipora, bido on Java and Bali, baweanus on Bawean Island, pallidus on Borneo, natunensis on Bunguran and Billiton Islands, asturinus on Nias, abbottii on Simalur and palawanensis on Palawan, Balabac and the Calamian Islands.
Habitat
Forest and forest edge, riverine woodland, farmland and sometimes near villages. Occurs up to 3,000m in the Himalayas.
Behaviour
The Crested Serpent Eagle, as its English and scientific names suggest, is a specialist reptile eater which hunts over woodland for snakes and lizards.