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{{Short description|Species of bird from Southeast Asia}}
{{Short description|Species of bird from Southeast Asia}}
{{Featured article}}
{{Featured article}}
{{Use British English|date=May 2022}}
{{Use British English|date=October 2022}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2022}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=October 2022}}
{{Speciesbox
{{Speciesbox
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| status = NT
| status = NT
| status_system = IUCN3.1
| status_system = IUCN3.1
| status_ref = <ref name="iucn status javanicus">{{cite iucn |author=BirdLife International |date=2016 |title=''Eurylaimus javanicus'' |volume=2016 |page=e.T103656944A104031815 |doi=10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T103656944A104031815.en |access-date=12 November 2021}}</ref>
| status_ref =<ref name="iucn status javanicus">{{cite iucn |author=BirdLife International |year=2016 |title=Javan Broadbill |volume=2016 |page=e.T103656944A104031815 |doi=10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T103656944A104031815.en |access-date=12 November 2021}}</ref>
| genus = Eurylaimus
| genus = Eurylaimus
| species = javanicus
| species = javanicus
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* ''Eurylaimus javanicus billitonis'' ({{small|[[C. Boden Kloss|Kloss]], 1931}})
* ''Eurylaimus javanicus billitonis'' ({{small|[[C. Boden Kloss|Kloss]], 1931}})
* ''Eurylaimus javanicus friedmanni'' ({{small|[[Herbert Girton Deignan|Deignan]], 1947}})
* ''Eurylaimus javanicus friedmanni'' ({{small|[[Herbert Girton Deignan|Deignan]], 1947}})
| synonyms_ref = <ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Dekker|first1=René W. R. J.|last2=Dickinson|first2=Edward C.|last3=Eck|first3=Siegfried|last4=Somadikarta|first4=Soekarja|date=2000|title=Systematic notes on Asian birds. 3. Types of the Eurylaimidae|url=https://www.aviansystematics.org/uploads/downloads/103/file/ZV331_077-088.pdf|journal=[[Zoologische Verhandelingen]]|issue=331|pages=80|issn=0024-1652|access-date=16 April 2022|archive-date=11 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511015956/https://www.aviansystematics.org/uploads/downloads/103/file/ZV331_077-088.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref>
| synonyms_ref =<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Dekker|first1=René W. R. J.|last2=Dickinson|first2=Edward C.|last3=Eck|first3=Siegfried|last4=Somadikarta|first4=Soekarja|year=2000|title=Systematic notes on Asian birds. 3. Types of the Eurylaimidae|url=https://www.aviansystematics.org/uploads/downloads/103/file/ZV331_077-088.pdf|journal=[[Zoologische Verhandelingen]]|issue=331|pages=80|issn=0024-1652|access-date=16 April 2022|archive-date=11 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511015956/https://www.aviansystematics.org/uploads/downloads/103/file/ZV331_077-088.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref>
}}
}}


The '''banded broadbill''' ('''''Eurylaimus javanicus''''') is a [[species]] of [[typical broadbill]] found in [[Mainland Southeast Asia]] and the [[Greater Sunda Islands]]. It is sometimes [[Lumpers and splitters#Biology|split]] into two species, one including only the [[nominate subspecies]], ''E. j. javanicus'', and one including all the remaining [[subspecies]]. It inhabits a variety of forests, along with [[forest edge]], [[rubber plantations]], and ''[[Falcataria falcata]]'' groves, mainly in lowland areas. A striking, large-bodied bird with a length of {{cvt|21.5–23.0|cm|in}}, it is unlikely to be mistaken for another species. The broadbill is mostly purplish-red, with yellow-streaked black wings, a bright blue beak, a blackish face, and greyish chin and upper breast. Females can be told apart from males by their lack of a black neckband, although these are indistinct in [[Borneo|Bornean]] and [[Java]]n males. Despite its conspicuous appearance, the species is usually hard to see due to its sluggishness and is usually only noticed when it vocalises.
The '''banded broadbill''' ('''''Eurylaimus javanicus''''') is a [[species]] of [[typical broadbill]] found in [[Mainland Southeast Asia]] and the [[Greater Sunda Islands]]. It is sometimes [[Lumpers and splitters#Biology|split]] into two species, one including only the [[nominate subspecies]], ''E. j. javanicus'', and one including all the remaining [[subspecies]]. It inhabits a variety of forests, along with [[forest edge]], [[rubber plantations]] and ''[[Falcataria falcata]]'' groves, mainly in lowland areas. A striking, large-bodied bird with a length of {{cvt|21.5–23.0|cm|in}}, it is unlikely to be mistaken for another species. The broadbill is mostly purplish-red, with yellow-streaked black wings, a bright blue beak, a blackish face and greyish chin and upper breast. Females can be told apart from males by their lack of a black neckband, although these are indistinct in [[Borneo|Bornean]] and [[Java]]n males. Despite its conspicuous appearance, the species is usually hard to see due to its sluggishness and is usually only noticed when it vocalises.


The species mainly eats [[arthropod]]s such as [[orthopterans]] (grasshoppers, [[katydids]], and crickets), [[true bugs]], and beetles, but has also been recorded feeding on snails, lizards, frogs, and figs. On the mainland, breeding generally occurs during the dry season; populations in the Greater Sundas have a longer breeding season lasting from March to November. On Java, the broadbill is thought to breed year-round. Their large, raggedy nests are hung from trees at a height of {{cvt|6–21|m|ft}} over clearings or water bodies. [[Clutch (eggs)|Clutches]] have two or three eggs. The eggs are usually dull white with dark purple or reddish-brown flecks, but those from West Java are dirty white with dense [[Rust (color)|rusty]]-brown to [[Lavender (color)|lavender]]-gray markings. The [[International Union for Conservation of Nature]], which splits the banded broadbill into two species, classifies ''javanicus'' as being [[Near-threatened species|near-threatened]] and the other subspecies as being of [[Least-concern species|least concern]].
The species mainly eats [[arthropod]]s such as [[orthopterans]] (grasshoppers, [[katydids]] and crickets), [[true bugs]] and beetles, but has also been recorded feeding on snails, lizards, frogs and figs. On the mainland, breeding generally occurs during the dry season; populations in the Greater Sundas have a longer breeding season lasting from March to November. On Java, the broadbill is thought to breed year-round. Their large, raggedy nests are hung from trees at a height of {{cvt|6–21|m|ft}} over clearings or water bodies. [[Clutch (eggs)|Clutches]] have two or three eggs. The eggs are usually dull white with dark purple or reddish-brown flecks, but those from West Java are dirty white with dense rusty-brown to lavender-gray markings. The [[International Union for Conservation of Nature]], which splits the banded broadbill into two species, classifies ''javanicus'' as being [[Near-threatened species|near-threatened]] and the other subspecies as being of [[Least-concern species|least concern]].


== Taxonomy and systematics ==
== Taxonomy and systematics ==
The banded broadbill was [[Species description|described]] as ''Eurylaimus javanicus'' by the American naturalist [[Thomas Horsfield]] in 1821 based on specimens from [[Java]]. It is the [[type species]] of the [[genus]] ''[[Eurylaimus]]'', which was created for it.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Horsfield |first=Thomas |date=1821 |title=Systematic arrangement and description of birds from the island of Java. |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/13692#page/189/mode/1up |url-status=live |journal=[[Transactions of the Linnean Society of London]] |language=en |volume=13 |issue=1 |pages=133–200 |doi=10.1111/j.1095-8339.1821.tb00061.x |access-date=30 December 2021 |via=[[Biodiversity Heritage Library]]}}</ref> The name of the genus, ''Eurylaimus'', derives from the [[Ancient Greek]] {{lang-grc|ευρυς|eurus|label=none}}, meaning broad, and {{lang-grc|λαιμος|laimos|label=none}}, meaning throat. The [[Specific name (zoology)|specific name]] ''javanicus'' comes from Java, the island on which it was discovered.<ref name="jobling 2010">{{Cite book |last=Jobling |first=James A. |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/304157#page/3/mode/1up |title=Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names |publisher=[[Christopher Helm Publishers|Christopher Helm]] |year=2010 |isbn=978-1408125014 |location=London |pages=154, 186–187, 211, 289 |language=en |oclc=1040808348 |access-date=16 April 2022 |url-status=live |via=[[Biodiversity Heritage Library]]}}</ref> Banded broadbill is the official [[common name]] designated by the [[International Ornithologists' Union]] (IOU).<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |date=1 February 2022 |editor-last=Gill |editor-first=Frank |editor2-last=Donsker |editor2-first=David |editor3-last=Rasmussen |editor3-first=Pamela |title=NZ wrens, Sapayoa, broadbills, asities, pittas |url=https://www.worldbirdnames.org/new/bow/nz_wrens/ |access-date=7 July 2021 |website=IOC World Bird List |language=en-US |archive-date=16 November 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201116163353/https://www.worldbirdnames.org/new/bow/nz_wrens/ |url-status=live }}</ref> Another common name for the species is Javan broadbill.<ref>{{Cite web|title=''Eurylaimus javanicus'' (Banded Broadbill)|url=https://avibase.bsc-eoc.org/species.jsp?avibaseid=07D343CCBE8FAF9F|url-status=live|access-date=30 December 2021|website=[[Avibase]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110924233030/http://avibase.bsc-eoc.org/species.jsp?avibaseid=07D343CCBE8FAF9F |archive-date=24 September 2011 }}</ref> The species is called {{lang|ms|takau rimba}} in [[Malay language|Malay]] and {{transliteration|th|Nok Phaya Paak Kwaang laay leuang}} in [[Thai language|Thai]].<ref name="Wells2010">{{Cite book |last=Wells |first=David R. |title=The Birds of the Thai-Malay Peninsula Vol. 2: Passerines |publisher=[[Bloomsbury Publishing]] |year=2010 |isbn=978-1408133132 |location=London |pages=56–58 |language=en |oclc=659739244}}</ref>
The banded broadbill was [[Species description|described]] as ''Eurylaimus javanicus'' by the American naturalist [[Thomas Horsfield]] in 1821 based on specimens from [[Java]]. It is the [[type species]] of the [[genus]] ''[[Eurylaimus]]'', which was created for it.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Horsfield |first=Thomas |year=1821 |title=Systematic arrangement and description of birds from the island of Java. |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/13692#page/189/mode/1up |journal=[[Transactions of the Linnean Society of London]] |language=en |volume=13 |issue=1 |pages=133–200 |doi=10.1111/j.1095-8339.1821.tb00061.x |access-date=30 December 2021 |via=[[Biodiversity Heritage Library]]}}</ref> The name of the genus, ''Eurylaimus'', derives from the [[Ancient Greek]] {{lang-grc|ευρυς|eurus|label=none}}, meaning broad, and {{lang-grc|λαιμος|laimos|label=none}}, meaning throat. The [[Specific name (zoology)|specific name]] ''javanicus'' comes from Java, the island on which it was discovered.<ref name="jobling 2010">{{Cite book |last=Jobling |first=James A. |url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/304157#page/3/mode/1up |title=Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names |publisher=[[Christopher Helm Publishers|Christopher Helm]] |year=2010 |isbn=978-1408125014 |location=London |pages=154, 186–187, 211, 289 |language=en |oclc=1040808348 |access-date=16 April 2022 |via=[[Biodiversity Heritage Library]]}}</ref> Banded broadbill is the official [[common name]] designated by the [[International Ornithologists' Union]] (IOU).<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |date=1 February 2022 |editor-last=Gill |editor-first=Frank |editor2-last=Donsker |editor2-first=David |editor3-last=Rasmussen |editor3-first=Pamela |title=NZ wrens, Sapayoa, broadbills, asities, pittas |url=https://www.worldbirdnames.org/new/bow/nz_wrens/ |access-date=7 July 2021 |website=IOC World Bird List |language=en-US |archive-date=16 November 2020 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201116163353/https://www.worldbirdnames.org/new/bow/nz_wrens/ |url-status=live }}</ref> Another common name for the species is Javan broadbill.<ref>{{Cite web|title=''Eurylaimus javanicus'' (Banded Broadbill)|url=https://avibase.bsc-eoc.org/species.jsp?avibaseid=07D343CCBE8FAF9F|url-status=live|access-date=30 December 2021|website=[[Avibase]]|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110924233030/http://avibase.bsc-eoc.org/species.jsp?avibaseid=07D343CCBE8FAF9F |archive-date=24 September 2011 }}</ref> The species is called {{lang|ms|takau rimba}} in [[Malay language|Malay]] and {{transliteration|th|Nok Phaya Paak Kwaang laay leuang}} in [[Thai language|Thai]].<ref name="Wells2010">{{Cite book |last=Wells |first=David R. |title=The Birds of the Thai-Malay Peninsula Vol. 2: Passerines |publisher=[[Bloomsbury Publishing]] |year=2010 |isbn=978-1408133132 |location=London |pages=56–58 |language=en |oclc=659739244}}</ref>


The banded broadbill is one of two species currently placed in the genus ''Eurylaimus'', in the typical broadbill [[Family (biology)|family]] [[Eurylaimidae|Eurylamidae]], a family of nine tropical species native to [[Southeast Asia]]''.''<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Winkler |first1=David W. |last2=Billerman |first2=Shawn M. |last3=Lovette |first3=Irby J. |date=4 March 2020 |editor-last=Billerman |editor-first=Shawn M. |editor2-last=Keeney |editor2-first=Brooke K. |editor3-last=Rodewald |editor3-first=Paul G. |editor4-last=Schulenberg |editor4-first=Thomas S. |title=Asian and Grauer's Broadbills (Eurylaimidae) |url=https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/species/euryla1/1.0/introduction |url-status=live |journal=Birds of the World |language=en |doi=10.2173/bow.euryla1.01 |url-access=subscription |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220416151525/https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/species/euryla1/1.0/introduction |archive-date=16 April 2022 |access-date=16 April 2022 |s2cid=216266937}}</ref> Based on a 2017 study by the Brazilian researcher Alexandre Selvatti and colleagues, its closest relative is the [[black-and-yellow broadbill]]. These two species are most closely related to a [[clade]] formed by the [[Black-and-red broadbill|black-and-red]] and [[silver-breasted broadbill]]s, and all three genera form a [[sister clade]] to the genus ''[[Sarcophanops]]''. This larger clade is sister to one formed by the [[long-tailed broadbill]] and [[dusky broadbill]]. Both of these clades are sister to [[Grauer's broadbill]]. The following cladogram shows [[Phylogenetics|phylogenetic]] relationships among the Eurylaimidae, based on the above study:{{Efn|The study did not include the [[Visayan broadbill]], which was formerly considered [[conspecific]] with the [[wattled broadbill]].<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Peters|first1=James Lee|url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/14480346#page/23/mode/1up|title=Check-list of birds of the world|publisher=[[Harvard University Press]]|year=1951|volume=7|location=Cambridge|pages=9|language=en|access-date=19 January 2022|url-status=live|via=[[Biodiversity Heritage Library]]}}</ref><ref name="Selvatti etal" />|name=|group=lower-alpha}}<ref name="Selvatti etal">{{Cite journal|last1=Selvatti|first1=A. P.|last2=Galvão|first2=A.|last3=Pereira|first3=A. G.|last4=Pedreira Gonzaga|first4=L.|last5=Russo|first5=C. A. D. M.|date=2017|title=An African origin of the Eurylaimides (Passeriformes) and the successful diversification of the ground-foraging pittas (Pittidae)|journal=[[Molecular Biology and Evolution]]|volume=34|issue=2|pages=483–499|doi=10.1093/molbev/msw250|pmid=28069777|doi-access=free}}</ref>
The banded broadbill is one of two species currently placed in the genus ''Eurylaimus'', in the typical broadbill [[Family (biology)|family]] [[Eurylaimidae]], a family of nine tropical species native to Southeast Asia''.''<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Winkler |first1=David W. |last2=Billerman |first2=Shawn M. |last3=Lovette |first3=Irby J. |date=4 March 2020 |editor-last=Billerman |editor-first=Shawn M. |editor2-last=Keeney |editor2-first=Brooke K. |editor3-last=Rodewald |editor3-first=Paul G. |editor4-last=Schulenberg |editor4-first=Thomas S. |title=Asian and Grauer's Broadbills (Eurylaimidae) |url=https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/species/euryla1/1.0/introduction |url-status=live |journal=Birds of the World |language=en |doi=10.2173/bow.euryla1.01 |url-access=subscription |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220416151525/https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/species/euryla1/1.0/introduction |archive-date=16 April 2022 |access-date=16 April 2022 |s2cid=216266937}}</ref> Based on a 2017 study by the Brazilian researcher Alexandre Selvatti and colleagues, its closest relative is the [[black-and-yellow broadbill]]. These two species are most closely related to a [[clade]] formed by the [[Black-and-red broadbill|black-and-red]] and [[silver-breasted broadbill]]s, and all three genera form a [[sister clade]] to the genus ''[[Sarcophanops]]''. This larger clade is sister to one formed by the [[long-tailed broadbill]] and [[dusky broadbill]]. Both of these clades are sister to [[Grauer's broadbill]]. The following cladogram shows [[Phylogenetics|phylogenetic]] relationships among the Eurylaimidae, based on the above study:{{Efn|The study did not include the [[Visayan broadbill]], which was formerly considered [[conspecific]] with the [[wattled broadbill]].<ref>{{Cite book|last1=Peters|first1=James Lee|url=https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/14480346#page/23/mode/1up|title=Check-list of birds of the world|publisher=[[Harvard University Press]]|year=1951|volume=7|location=Cambridge|pages=9|language=en|access-date=19 January 2022|via=[[Biodiversity Heritage Library]]}}</ref><ref name="Selvatti etal" />|name=|group=lower-alpha}}<ref name="Selvatti etal">{{Cite journal|last1=Selvatti|first1=A. P.|last2=Galvão|first2=A.|last3=Pereira|first3=A. G.|last4=Pedreira Gonzaga|first4=L.|last5=Russo|first5=C. A. D. M.|year=2017|title=An African origin of the Eurylaimides (Passeriformes) and the successful diversification of the ground-foraging pittas (Pittidae)|journal=[[Molecular Biology and Evolution]]|volume=34|issue=2|pages=483–499|doi=10.1093/molbev/msw250|pmid=28069777|doi-access=free}}</ref>


{{clade|{{clade
{{clade|{{clade
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Four subspecies of the banded broadbill are currently recognised by the IOU:<ref name=":0" />
Four subspecies of the banded broadbill are currently recognised by the IOU:<ref name=":0" />


* ''E. j. pallidus'' ({{small|[[Frederick Nutter Chasen|Chasen]], 1935}}):{{Efn|''pallidus'' means pale and is derived from the [[Modern Latin]] {{lang|la|pallidus}}, meaning pallid.<ref name="jobling 2010" />|group=lower-alpha}} found from southeastern Myanmar to Vietnam and the [[Malay Peninsula]].<ref name=":0" /> Populations from the northern Malay Peninsula are sometimes separated as ''E. j. friedmanni''.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last1=Dekker|first1=René W.R.J.|last2=Dickinson|first2=Edward C.|date=2000|title=Systematic notes on Asian birds. 2. A preliminary review of the Eurylaimidae|url=https://www.aviansystematics.org/uploads/downloads/102/file/ZV331_065-076.pdf|journal=[[Zoologische Verhandelingen]]|issue=331|pages=65–76|access-date=30 December 2021|archive-date=11 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511003006/https://www.aviansystematics.org/uploads/downloads/102/file/ZV331_065-076.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> It is similar to ''harterti'', but has more metallic grey {{Birdgloss|underparts}} and pinker throats and {{Birdgloss|upperparts}}.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
* ''E. j. pallidus'' ({{small|[[Frederick Nutter Chasen|Chasen]], 1935}}):{{Efn|''pallidus'' means pale and is derived from the [[Modern Latin]] {{lang|la|pallidus}}, meaning pallid.<ref name="jobling 2010" />|group=lower-alpha}} found from southeastern Myanmar to Vietnam and the [[Malay Peninsula]].<ref name=":0" /> Populations from the northern Malay Peninsula are sometimes separated as ''E. j. friedmanni''.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last1=Dekker|first1=René W.R.J.|last2=Dickinson|first2=Edward C.|year=2000|title=Systematic notes on Asian birds. 2. A preliminary review of the Eurylaimidae|url=https://www.aviansystematics.org/uploads/downloads/102/file/ZV331_065-076.pdf|journal=[[Zoologische Verhandelingen]]|issue=331|pages=65–76|access-date=30 December 2021|archive-date=11 May 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210511003006/https://www.aviansystematics.org/uploads/downloads/102/file/ZV331_065-076.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref> It is similar to ''harterti'', but has more metallic grey {{Birdgloss|underparts}} and pinker throats and {{Birdgloss|upperparts}}.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
* ''E. j. harterti'' ({{small|[[Eduard Daniël van Oort|van Oort]], 1909}}):{{Efn|''harterti'' is an [[eponym]] in honour of [[Ernst Johann Otto Hartert]], a German ornithologist and natural history collector.<ref name="jobling 2010" />|group=lower-alpha}} found on [[Sumatra]], the [[Riau Archipelago]], [[Bangka Island]], and [[Belitung]].<ref name=":0" /> The population from Belitung was previously recognised as ''E. j. billitonis'', but this is not generally accepted anymore.<ref name=":1" /> It is larger than the nominate subspecies, with light blue-green [[Iris (anatomy)|irises]], darker underparts, a more reddish upper back, and a pink {{Birdgloss|vent}}.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
* ''E. j. harterti'' ({{small|[[Eduard Daniël van Oort|van Oort]], 1909}}):{{Efn|''harterti'' is an [[:wikt:eponym|eponym]] in honour of [[Ernst Johann Otto Hartert]], a German ornithologist and natural history collector.<ref name="jobling 2010" />|group=lower-alpha}} found on [[Sumatra]], the [[Riau Archipelago]], [[Bangka Island]] and [[Belitung]].<ref name=":0" /> The population from Belitung was previously recognised as ''E. j. billitonis'', but this is not generally accepted any more.<ref name=":1" /> It is larger than the nominate subspecies, with light blue-green [[Iris (anatomy)|irises]], darker underparts, a more reddish upper back and a pink {{Birdgloss|vent}}.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
* ''E. j. javanicus'' ({{small|[[Thomas Horsfield|Horsfield]], 1821}}): also known as the Javan broadbill, it is the [[nominate subspecies]] and found on Java.<ref name=":0" /> It is smaller than the other subspecies, with a yellow (instead of blue) iris, a narrower breast-band, a yellow (instead of purplish) vent, and a paler belly.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
* ''E. j. javanicus'' ({{small|[[Thomas Horsfield|Horsfield]], 1821}}): also known as the Javan broadbill, it is the [[nominate subspecies]] and found on Java.<ref name=":0" /> It is smaller than the other subspecies, with a yellow (instead of blue) iris, a narrower breast-band, a yellow (instead of purplish) vent and a paler belly.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
* ''E. j. brookei'' ({{small|[[Herbert C. Robinson|Robinson]] & [[C. Boden Kloss|Kloss]], 1919}}):{{Efn|''brookei'' is an [[eponym]] in honour of [[Charles Vyner Brooke]], the third and last of the [[White Rajah]]s of [[Raj of Sarawak|Sarawak]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=7 July 2022 |editor-last=Jobling |editor-first=James A. |title=The Key to Scientific Names |url=https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/key-to-scientific-names/search?q=brookei |url-status=live |access-date=7 July 2022 |website=Birds of the World }}</ref>|group=lower-alpha}} found on [[Borneo]] and the northern [[Natuna Islands]].<ref name=":0" /> Like ''harterti'', but is pinker, with an indistinct neckband, blacker forehead, and pinker throat.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
* ''E. j. brookei'' ({{small|[[Herbert C. Robinson|Robinson]] & [[C. Boden Kloss|Kloss]], 1919}}):{{Efn|''brookei'' is an [[:wikt:eponym|eponym]] in honour of [[Charles Vyner Brooke]], the third and last of the [[White Rajah]]s of [[Raj of Sarawak|Sarawak]].<ref>{{Cite web |date=7 July 2022 |editor-last=Jobling |editor-first=James A. |title=The Key to Scientific Names |url=https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/key-to-scientific-names/search?q=brookei |access-date=7 July 2022 |website=Birds of the World }}</ref>|group=lower-alpha}} found on [[Borneo]] and the northern [[Natuna Islands]].<ref name=":0" /> Like ''harterti'', but is pinker, with an indistinct neckband, blacker forehead and pinker throat.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />


All the subspecies excluding ''javanicus'' are sometimes [[Lumpers and splitters#Biology|split]] as a separate species, ''E. harterti'', on the basis of [[Morphology (biology)|morphology]], which would make the current species [[Monotypic taxon|monotypic]] (having only one subspecies).<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount">{{Cite journal |last1=Kirwan |first1=Guy M. |last2=del Hoyo |first2=Josep |last3=Bruce |first3=Murray D. |last4=Collar |first4=Nigel |date=16 July 2021 |editor-last=Billerman |editor-first=Shawn M. |editor2-last=Keeney |editor2-first=Brooke K. |editor3-last=Rodewald |editor3-first=Paul G. |editor4-last=Schulenberg |editor4-first=Thomas S. |title=Banded Broadbill (''Eurylaimus javanicus'') |url=https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/species/banbro1/2.0/introduction |url-status=live |journal=Birds of the World |language=en |doi=10.2173/bow.banbro1.02 |url-access=subscription |access-date=3 May 2022 |s2cid=240930089}}</ref> According to this scheme, the nominate subspecies is called the Javan broadbill,<ref name="iucn status javanicus" /> and the three subspecies in ''E. harterti'' (''harterti'', ''brookei'', and ''pallidus'') are called the banded broadbill.<ref name="harterti iucn status" />
All the subspecies excluding ''javanicus'' are sometimes [[Lumpers and splitters#Biology|split]] as a separate species, ''E. harterti'', on the basis of [[Morphology (biology)|morphology]], which would make the current species [[Monotypic taxon|monotypic]] (having only one subspecies).<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount">{{Cite journal |last1=Kirwan |first1=Guy M. |last2=del Hoyo |first2=Josep |last3=Bruce |first3=Murray D. |last4=Collar |first4=Nigel |date=16 July 2021 |editor-last=Billerman |editor-first=Shawn M. |editor2-last=Keeney |editor2-first=Brooke K. |editor3-last=Rodewald |editor3-first=Paul G. |editor4-last=Schulenberg |editor4-first=Thomas S. |title=Banded Broadbill (''Eurylaimus javanicus'') |url=https://birdsoftheworld.org/bow/species/banbro1/2.0/introduction |journal=Birds of the World |language=en |doi=10.2173/bow.banbro1.02 |url-access=subscription |access-date=3 May 2022 |s2cid=240930089}}</ref> According to this scheme, the nominate subspecies is called the Javan broadbill,<ref name="iucn status javanicus" /> and the three subspecies in ''E. harterti'' (''harterti'', ''brookei'' and ''pallidus'') are called the banded broadbill.<ref name="harterti iucn status" />


== Description ==
== Description ==
[[File:Banded Broadbill (Eurylaimus javanicus brookei) - Flickr - Lip Kee (1).jpg|alt=banded broadbill dorsal view showing yellowish streaking on the black wings and tail|thumb|Adult from [[Sabah]], [[Malaysian Borneo]] showing the markings on the wings and back]]
[[File:Banded Broadbill (Eurylaimus javanicus brookei) - Flickr - Lip Kee (1).jpg|alt=banded broadbill dorsal view showing yellowish streaking on the black wings and tail|thumb|Adult from [[Sabah]], [[Malaysian Borneo]] showing the markings on the wings and back]]


The banded broadbill is a striking, large-bodied bird, with a length of {{Cvt|21.5–23.0|cm|in}}. The weight of 10 adult ''pallidus'' specimens from the Malay Peninsula was {{Cvt|65.1–95.0|g|oz}}, males weighing slightly more than females. If seen clearly, the species is unlikely to be confused with any other bird. It may be mistaken for black-and-yellow broadbill, which differs in its smaller size, black head, and contrasting white collar.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
The banded broadbill is a striking, large-bodied bird, with a length of {{Cvt|21.5–23.0|cm|in}}. The weight of 10 adult ''pallidus'' specimens from the Malay Peninsula was {{Cvt|65.1–95.0|g|oz}}, males weighing slightly more than females. If seen clearly, the species is unlikely to be confused with any other bird. It may be mistaken for black-and-yellow broadbill, which differs in its smaller size, black head and contrasting white collar.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />


Adult males of the nominate subspecies have a glossy purple-red head, which turns black towards the {{Birdgloss|lores}} (region between the eyes and beak) and base of the bill. The chin, throat, and {{Birdgloss|ear-coverts}} are slightly lighter, with a black band across the neck; this neckband is sometimes faint or absent in males from Borneo and Java. The top of the head is glossy [[maroon]] black and turns grey towards the back of the neck. The upper back is maroon-tinged dark brown; the rest of the back is mostly black, except for a central line of yellow streaks. The {{Birdgloss|primary feathers}} are dark brown, with thin yellow edges that are present as a yellow line on the bend of the wing. The remaining {{Birdgloss|wing-coverts}} are blackish, with yellowish markings. The {{Birdgloss|secondaries}} have bright yellow edges to their outer margins that form a well-marked, trapezoidal patch on the wing. The underparts are pale pinkish-[[Violet (color)|violet]] to [[Wine (color)|wine]]-red, with a grey tinge to the chin and upper breast and a pure grey breast-band. The tail is dark black and has white spots on the underside, the {{Birdgloss|undertail-coverts}} are pale yellow and the {{Birdgloss|rump}} has a variable black and yellow pattern. The brilliant [[Turquoise (color)|turquoise]] blue beak is broad and hooked, edged green or black.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" /> It is among the widest-billed broadbills, with a thick, heart-shaped, and wide tongue that allows it to mash and "chew" its food, helping the species consume relatively large prey.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Zubkova |first=E. N. |date=2019 |title=Functional morphology of the hyoid apparatus in Old World suboscines (Eurylaimides): 1. Anatomical description |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1134/S1062359019070136 |url-status=live |journal=[[The Biological Bulletin|Biology Bulletin]] |language=en |volume=46 |issue=7 |pages=679–690 |doi=10.1134/S1062359019070136 |issn=1062-3590 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220507090817/https://link.springer.com/article/10.1134/S1062359019070136 |archive-date=7 May 2022 |access-date=3 May 2022 |s2cid=211218567}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Zubkova |first=E. N. |date=December 2019 |title=Functional morphology of the hyoid apparatus in Old World suboscines (Eurylaimides): 2. Functional analysis |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1134/S1062359019080193 |url-status=live |journal=[[The Biological Bulletin|Biology Bulletin]] |language=en |volume=46 |issue=8 |pages=916–928 |doi=10.1134/S1062359019080193 |issn=1062-3590 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220101104016/https://link.springer.com/article/10.1134%2FS1062359019080193 |archive-date=1 January 2022 |access-date=3 May 2022 |s2cid=211218046}}</ref> The irises are pale yellow in ''javanicus'' and sapphire blue in all other subspecies, and the legs are pale pinkish-brown to light greyish-blue with dull black feathering.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
Adult males of the nominate subspecies have a glossy purple-red head, which turns black towards the {{Birdgloss|lores}} (region between the eyes and beak) and base of the bill. The chin, throat and {{Birdgloss|ear-coverts}} are slightly lighter, with a black band across the neck; this neckband is sometimes faint or absent in males from Borneo and Java. The top of the head is glossy maroon black and turns grey towards the back of the neck. The upper back is maroon-tinged dark brown; the rest of the back is mostly black, except for a central line of yellow streaks. The {{Birdgloss|primary feathers}} are dark brown, with thin yellow edges that are present as a yellow line on the bend of the wing. The remaining {{Birdgloss|wing-coverts}} are blackish, with yellowish markings. The {{Birdgloss|secondaries}} have bright yellow edges to their outer margins that form a well-marked, trapezoidal patch on the wing. The underparts are pale pinkish-violet to wine-red, with a grey tinge to the chin and upper breast and a pure grey breast-band. The tail is dark black and has white spots on the underside, the {{Birdgloss|undertail-coverts}} are pale yellow and the {{Birdgloss|rump}} has a variable black and yellow pattern. The brilliant turquoise blue beak is broad and hooked, edged green or black.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" /> It is among the widest-billed broadbills, with a thick, heart-shaped and wide tongue that allows it to mash and "chew" its food, helping the species consume relatively large prey.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Zubkova |first=E. N. |year=2019 |title=Functional morphology of the hyoid apparatus in Old World suboscines (Eurylaimides): 1. Anatomical description |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1134/S1062359019070136 |url-status=live |journal=[[The Biological Bulletin|Biology Bulletin]] |language=en |volume=46 |issue=7 |pages=679–690 |doi=10.1134/S1062359019070136 |issn=1062-3590 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220507090817/https://link.springer.com/article/10.1134/S1062359019070136 |archive-date=7 May 2022 |access-date=3 May 2022 |s2cid=211218567}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Zubkova |first=E. N. |date=December 2019 |title=Functional morphology of the hyoid apparatus in Old World suboscines (Eurylaimides): 2. Functional analysis |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1134/S1062359019080193 |url-status=live |journal=[[The Biological Bulletin|Biology Bulletin]] |language=en |volume=46 |issue=8 |pages=916–928 |doi=10.1134/S1062359019080193 |issn=1062-3590 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220101104016/https://link.springer.com/article/10.1134%2FS1062359019080193 |archive-date=1 January 2022 |access-date=3 May 2022 |s2cid=211218046}}</ref> The irises are pale yellow in ''javanicus'' and sapphire blue in all other subspecies, and the legs are pale pinkish-brown to light greyish-blue with dull black feathering.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />


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Females are similar to males, but can be told apart by their lack of a neckband and greyer heads and underparts. Juveniles have pale brown heads, brown upper backs, dark brown wings, and black tails. They have a marked yellow {{Birdgloss|supercilium}} (line above the eye) that widens towards the back of the neck to become a broken collar, and the ear-coverts have narrow yellow streaks. The upper back has irregular yellow spots and the back and rump are largely yellow. The wings have yellowish markings like those of adults. The throat is yellowish with pale dark streaks and is separated from the breast by a yellowish-white strip, the rest of the underparts being a pink-tinted yellow. The bill is orangish-brown. As juveniles age, the yellow on the body is gradually replaced with purple-pink, starting with the head and side of the neck. In Malaysia, moulting has been observed in all months except January and February and peaks from May to August. The primary feathers nearest the body are moulted first, and those further away moult later.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
Females are similar to males, but can be told apart by their lack of a neckband and greyer heads and underparts. Juveniles have pale brown heads, brown upper backs, dark brown wings and black tails. They have a marked yellow {{Birdgloss|supercilium}} (line above the eye) that widens towards the back of the neck to become a broken collar, and the ear-coverts have narrow yellow streaks. The upper back has irregular yellow spots and the back and rump are largely yellow. The wings have yellowish markings like those of adults. The throat is yellowish with pale dark streaks and is separated from the breast by a yellowish-white strip, the rest of the underparts being a pink-tinted yellow. The bill is orangish-brown. As juveniles age, the yellow on the body is gradually replaced with purple-pink, starting with the head and side of the neck. In Malaysia, moulting has been observed in all months except January and February and peaks from May to August. The primary feathers nearest the body are moulted first, and those further away moult later.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />


Reddish colours in the banded broadbill's plumage are caused by the [[biological pigment]] 2,3-didehydro-papilioerythrinone, which is also found in the black-and-yellow broadbill, black-and-red broadbill, and ''Sarcophanops'' species. The yellow in the species' plumage is caused by the [[carotenoid]] 7,8-dihydro-3′-dehydro-lutein, which is also present in the plumage of the black-and-yellow broadbill.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Prum |first1=Richard O. |last2=LaFountain |first2=Amy M. |last3=Berg |first3=Christopher J. |last4=Tauber |first4=Michael J. |last5=Frank |first5=Harry A. |date=2014 |title=Mechanism of carotenoid coloration in the brightly colored plumages of broadbills (Eurylaimidae) |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s00360-014-0816-1 |url-status=live |journal=[[Journal of Comparative Physiology B]] |language=en |volume=184 |issue=5 |pages=651–672 |doi=10.1007/s00360-014-0816-1 |issn=0174-1578 |pmid=24647990 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220101104015/https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00360-014-0816-1 |archive-date=1 January 2022 |access-date=18 April 2022 |s2cid=18907522}}</ref>
Reddish colours in the banded broadbill's plumage are caused by the [[biological pigment]] 2,3-didehydro-papilioerythrinone, which is also found in the black-and-yellow broadbill, black-and-red broadbill and ''Sarcophanops'' species. The yellow in the species' plumage is caused by the [[carotenoid]] 7,8-dihydro-3′-dehydro-lutein, which is also present in the plumage of the black-and-yellow broadbill.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=Prum |first1=Richard O. |last2=LaFountain |first2=Amy M. |last3=Berg |first3=Christopher J. |last4=Tauber |first4=Michael J. |last5=Frank |first5=Harry A. |year=2014 |title=Mechanism of carotenoid coloration in the brightly colored plumages of broadbills (Eurylaimidae) |url=http://link.springer.com/10.1007/s00360-014-0816-1 |url-status=live |journal=[[Journal of Comparative Physiology B]] |language=en |volume=184 |issue=5 |pages=651–672 |doi=10.1007/s00360-014-0816-1 |issn=0174-1578 |pmid=24647990 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220101104015/https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs00360-014-0816-1 |archive-date=1 January 2022 |access-date=18 April 2022 |s2cid=18907522}}</ref>


=== Vocalisation ===
=== Vocalisation ===
The species' song is a remarkable, short, loud ''wheeoo'' or ''wiuk'', occasionally prefaced with 4–9 ''whirr'' notes and always followed with a noisy, high-speed, rattling trill lasting 5–9 seconds that initially rises in pitch before quickly falling. This song is frequently given by two birds one after the other, with neighbouring pairs then responding. It can be triggered by other sudden, loud sounds, but the response to playback (recorded birdsong) is usually sluggish. Other calls include a nasal ''whee-u'', a squeaky ''kyeeow'', a ''keowrr'', and a squealing ''keek-eek-eek'' similar to that of a black-and-red broadbill.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" /> Soft calls made during wing displays are less squeaky and lower than similar ones made by black-and-yellow broadbills.<ref name=":2" />
The species' song is a remarkable, short, loud ''wheeoo'' or ''wiuk'', occasionally prefaced with 4–9 ''whirr'' notes and always followed with a noisy, high-speed, rattling trill lasting 5–9 seconds that initially rises in pitch before quickly falling. This song is frequently given by two birds one after the other, with neighbouring pairs then responding. It can be triggered by other sudden, loud sounds, but the response to playback (recorded birdsong) is usually sluggish. Other calls include a nasal ''whee-u'', a squeaky ''kyeeow'', a ''keowrr'' and a squealing ''keek-eek-eek'' similar to that of a black-and-red broadbill.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" /> Soft calls made during wing displays are less squeaky and lower than similar ones made by black-and-yellow broadbills.<ref name=":2" />


== Distribution and habitat ==
== Distribution and habitat ==
The banded broadbill is found in [[Mainland Southeast Asia]] and the [[Greater Sunda Islands]]. In Indochina, it is known from southern and central Vietnam, most of western and southern Thailand, most of Cambodia excluding the [[Tonlé Sap]], southern and central [[Laos]], and the [[Tenasserim Hills]] and [[Karen Hills]] in southeastern Myanmar. In the Greater Sundas, the species inhabits Sumatra, Borneo, Java, Belitung, Bangka Island, the North Natuna Islands, and the Riau Archipelago. It went [[locally extinct]] in Singapore around 1928; reports of its presence on [[Penang Island]] are unconfirmed. It is usually [[non-migratory]], but reports of an individual or multiple individuals living in a tract of [[secondary forest]] on a former [[rubber plantation]] in Kuala Lumpur over a period of three years indicates that the species wanders upon the loss of its usual habitat.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
The banded broadbill is found in [[Mainland Southeast Asia]] and the [[Greater Sunda Islands]]. In Indochina, it is known from southern and central Vietnam, most of western and southern Thailand, most of Cambodia excluding the [[Tonlé Sap]], southern and central [[Laos]] and the [[Tenasserim Hills]] and [[Karen Hills]] in southeastern Myanmar. In the Greater Sundas, the species inhabits Sumatra, Borneo, Java, Belitung, Bangka Island, the North Natuna Islands and the Riau Archipelago. It went [[locally extinct]] in Singapore around 1928; reports of its presence on [[Penang Island]] are unconfirmed. It is usually [[non-migratory]], but reports of an individual or multiple individuals living in a tract of [[secondary forest]] on a former [[rubber plantation]] in Kuala Lumpur over a period of three years indicates that the species wanders upon the loss of its usual habitat.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />


The species inhabits several types of forest, including [[primary forests]], [[Selective logging|selectively logged]] forests that have regrown, [[peat swamp forests]], high-altitude [[heath forests]], [[freshwater swamp forests]], [[forest edge]], rubber plantations, and ''[[Falcataria falcata]]'' groves. On the mainland, it is commonest in [[Evergreen forest|evergreen]] and [[mixed deciduous forest]]s, but is also seen in adjacent gardens and villages, as well as secondary forests. On Java, it is usually seen in forest edge, especially on mountain slopes. Despite mainly being a lowland species, the banded broadbill is found up to elevations of {{Cvt|1050–1100|m|ft}} on the [[Malay Peninsula]] and Sumatra, {{Cvt|1100|m|ft}} in Laos, {{Cvt|1200|m|ft}} in Cambodia, and {{Cvt|1220|m|ft}} on Borneo. On Java, it is typically found at altitudes of {{Cvt|485–915|m|ft}}, but is sometimes as high as {{Cvt|1500|m|ft}}.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
The species inhabits several types of forest, including [[primary forests]], [[Selective logging|selectively logged]] forests that have regrown, [[peat swamp forests]], high-altitude [[heath forests]], [[freshwater swamp forests]], [[forest edge]], rubber plantations and ''[[Falcataria falcata]]'' groves. On the mainland, it is commonest in [[Evergreen forest|evergreen]] and [[mixed deciduous forest]]s, but is also seen in adjacent gardens and villages, as well as secondary forests. On Java, it is usually seen in forest edge, especially on mountain slopes. Despite mainly being a lowland species, the banded broadbill is found up to elevations of {{Cvt|1050–1100|m|ft}} on the [[Malay Peninsula]] and Sumatra, {{Cvt|1100|m|ft}} in Laos, {{Cvt|1200|m|ft}} in Cambodia and {{Cvt|1220|m|ft}} on Borneo. On Java, it is typically found at altitudes of {{Cvt|485–915|m|ft}}, but is sometimes as high as {{Cvt|1500|m|ft}}.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />


== Behaviour and ecology ==
== Behaviour and ecology ==
Despite the banded broadbill's distinctive and conspicuous colouration, it is generally hard to observe due to its lethargic habits and is generally only seen due to its loud song.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" /> It is known to make wing and [[Gaping (animal behavior)|gaping]] displays similar to those of the black-and-yellow broadbill. Wing displays include raising the wings slightly above the back and then slowly opening and closing the [[flight feathers]], and are made after singing, foraging, or in response to playback. They may include just one wing and are sometimes complemented with a tail wag. Gaping displays are conducted by opening and closing the bill measuredly without making any sounds. These displays are performed both when alone and in the presence of other banded broadbills, and have been observed being performed near nests. They are also sometimes accompanied by soft calls.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal |last1=Gulson-Castillo |first1=Eric R. |last2=Pegan |first2=Teresa M. |last3=Greig |first3=Emma I. |last4=Hite |first4=Justin M. |last5=Hruska |first5=Jack P. |last6=Kapoor |first6=Julian A. |last7=Orzechowski |first7=Sophia C. |last8=Shipley |first8=J. Ryan |last9=Winkler |first9=David W. |date=15 March 2019 |title=Notes on nesting, territoriality and behaviour of broadbills (Eurylaimidae, Calyptomenidae) and pittas (Pittidae) in Tawau Hills Park, Sabah, Malaysian Borneo |journal=[[Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club]] |volume=139 |issue=1 |pages=11–15 |doi=10.25226/bboc.v139i1.2019.a1 |issn=0007-1595 |doi-access=free |s2cid=133794807}}</ref>
Despite the banded broadbill's distinctive and conspicuous colouration, it is generally hard to observe due to its lethargic habits and is generally only seen due to its loud song.<ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" /> It is known to make wing and [[Gaping (animal behavior)|gaping]] displays similar to those of the black-and-yellow broadbill. Wing displays include raising the wings slightly above the back and then slowly opening and closing the [[flight feathers]], and are made after singing, foraging or in response to playback. They may include just one wing and are sometimes complemented with a tail wag. Gaping displays are conducted by opening and closing the bill measuredly without making any sounds. These displays are performed both when alone and in the presence of other banded broadbills, and have been observed being performed near nests. They are also sometimes accompanied by soft calls.<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal |last1=Gulson-Castillo |first1=Eric R. |last2=Pegan |first2=Teresa M. |last3=Greig |first3=Emma I. |last4=Hite |first4=Justin M. |last5=Hruska |first5=Jack P. |last6=Kapoor |first6=Julian A. |last7=Orzechowski |first7=Sophia C. |last8=Shipley |first8=J. Ryan |last9=Winkler |first9=David W. |date=15 March 2019 |title=Notes on nesting, territoriality and behaviour of broadbills (Eurylaimidae, Calyptomenidae) and pittas (Pittidae) in Tawau Hills Park, Sabah, Malaysian Borneo |journal=[[Bulletin of the British Ornithologists' Club]] |volume=139 |issue=1 |pages=11–15 |doi=10.25226/bboc.v139i1.2019.a1 |issn=0007-1595 |doi-access=free |s2cid=133794807}}</ref>


=== Feeding ===
=== Feeding ===
[[File:Banded Broadbill - Adult feeding juvenile.jpg|alt=Adult banded broadbill giving a large arthropod to a juvenile with its beak open|thumb|Adult banded broadbill feeding juvenile in [[Sabah]]]]
[[File:Banded Broadbill - Adult feeding juvenile.jpg|alt=Adult banded broadbill giving a large arthropod to a juvenile with its beak open|thumb|Adult banded broadbill feeding juvenile in [[Sabah]]]]


The banded broadbill's diet includes [[arthropods]], small [[vertebrates]], and fruit. Its main prey is [[orthopterans]] (grasshoppers, [[katydids]], and crickets) with an average length of {{Cvt|55|mm|in}}. It also feeds on [[true bugs]] (Hemiptera), snails, spiders, and beetles such as [[ground beetles]] (Carabidae), [[darkling beetles]] (Tenebrionidae), and [[Curculionidae|true weevils]] (Curculionidae). Small fruit like ''[[Ficus]]'' figs are also eaten, although their importance in the species' diet is unknown. The broadbill has been recorded eating lizards up to {{Cvt|10|cm|in}} long and frogs, eating both head-first.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
The banded broadbill's diet includes [[arthropods]], small [[vertebrates]] and fruit. Its main prey is [[orthopterans]] (grasshoppers, [[katydids]] and crickets) with an average length of {{Cvt|55|mm|in}}. It also feeds on [[true bugs]] (Hemiptera), snails, spiders and beetles such as [[ground beetles]] (Carabidae), [[darkling beetles]] (Tenebrionidae) and [[Curculionidae|true weevils]] (Curculionidae). Small fruit like ''[[Ficus]]'' figs are also eaten, although their importance in the species' diet is unknown. The broadbill has been recorded eating lizards up to {{Cvt|10|cm|in}} long and frogs, eating both head-first.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />


Like other broadbills, the species forages in a sluggish manner. It has a toothed bill-tip and spends the majority of its time [[still-hunting]], taking off from high perches and grabbing prey from nearby branches and the undersides of leaves. Except for probing head movements, often upwards, the broadbill is generally motionless. It has been observed making erratic, fluttering flights to [[Gleaning (birds)|glean]] prey before perching again, as well as catching prey in flight in a more elegant manner. Pairs and small flocks that are thought to be family groups are active throughout the day, occasionally joining [[mixed-species foraging flocks]].<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
Like other broadbills, the species forages in a sluggish manner. It has a toothed bill-tip and spends the majority of its time [[still-hunting]], taking off from high perches and grabbing prey from nearby branches and the undersides of leaves. Except for probing head movements, often upwards, the broadbill is generally motionless. It has been observed making erratic, fluttering flights to [[Gleaning (birds)|glean]] prey before perching again, as well as catching prey in flight in a more elegant manner. Pairs and small flocks that are thought to be family groups are active throughout the day, occasionally joining [[mixed-species foraging flocks]].<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />


=== Breeding ===
=== Breeding ===
On the Malay Peninsula, breeding in the banded broadbill usually takes place in the dry season following the [[East Asian Monsoon]]. The only recorded nest from Myanmar was observed in [[Tanintharyi Region|Tenasserim]] on 21 March. In [[Peninsular Malaysia]], nests have been seen in February and March and immatures from early April to early September, extrapolating to eggs being laid from March to May and in July. Observances of nests and immatures in Thailand are at later times than in Malaysia, reflecting the passage of the monsoon. In Laos, immatures have been seen in June, indicating that breeding took place at the beginning of the wet season, instead of the dry season like the rest of the peninsula. The breeding season is lengthier on the Greater Sunda Islands, lasting from March to November. On Borneo, adults have been observed collecting nesting material in March and a recently fledged bird was seen in September; males with enlarged [[testicles]] have been collected from March to July. The banded broadbill's breeding season is particularly prolonged on Sumatra and Java. Immatures have been observed in March, July, September, and November on Sumatra and eggs have been collected from Belitung in April. On Java, the species may breed throughout the year, with nests collected in April, June, and December and immatures between March and December.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount"></ref>
On the Malay Peninsula, breeding in the banded broadbill usually takes place in the dry season following the [[East Asian Monsoon]]. The only recorded nest from Myanmar was observed in [[Tanintharyi Region|Tenasserim]] on 21 March. In [[Peninsular Malaysia]], nests have been seen in February and March and immatures from early April to early September, extrapolating to eggs being laid from March to May and in July. Observances of nests and immatures in Thailand are at later times than in Malaysia, reflecting the passage of the monsoon. In Laos, immatures have been seen in June, indicating that breeding took place at the beginning of the wet season, instead of the dry season like the rest of the peninsula. The breeding season is lengthier on the Greater Sunda Islands, lasting from March to November. On Borneo, adults have been observed collecting nesting material in March and a recently fledged bird was seen in September; males with enlarged [[testicles]] have been collected from March to July. The banded broadbill's breeding season is particularly prolonged on Sumatra and Java. Immatures have been observed in March, July, September and November on Sumatra and eggs have been collected from Belitung in April. On Java, the species may breed throughout the year, with nests collected in April, June and December and immatures between March and December.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount"></ref>


Like other typical broadbills, the banded broadbill's nests are usually made at a height of {{Cvt|6–21|m|ft}} over clearings or water bodies, hanging from dead or living trees like [[Dipterocarpaceae|dipeterocarps]] and ''[[Koompassia excelsa]]''. They have also been recorded being built on [[epiphytes]] like ''[[Pandanus]]'', [[ferns]], and bamboo. Nests are generally hung from a sideways branch close to the [[Trunk (botany)|trunk]], but are sometimes also suspended from thick leaves and bamboo tips. Nests have been observed being built close to the [[beehives]] of species like the [[giant honey bee]] (''Apis dorsata'') and [[Halictidae]] sweat bees, a strategy that is also seen in the black-and-yellow broadbill and which may provide protection. One nest in Borneo was observed being built over a period of 18{{Nbsp}}days,both adults participating in nest-building. The nests are large, raggedy, and oval or pear-shaped, with a total length of {{Cvt|75–90|cm|in}}, including the trailing tail. Materials used to make the nest include leaves, twigs, roots, fibers, moss, leaf skeletons, grass stems, and [[bryophytes]].<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" /> Both sexes have been observed collecting nesting material.<ref name=":2" /> The inner chamber is covered with leaves and thick grass stems, and the outside is embellished with [[lichen]], bryophytes, green moss, [[Frass|insect excreta]], cocoons, and cobwebs, presumably to provide [[camouflage]]. The entrances to the nest are covered by a slanting [[Eaves|eave]]. A nest from [[Sabah]] had a height of {{Cvt|25|cm|in}}, a width of {{Cvt|22.5|cm|in}}, and a depth of {{Cvt|15|cm|in}}, with an entrance measuring {{Cvt|54 × 58|mm|in}}.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
Like other typical broadbills, the banded broadbill's nests are usually made at a height of {{Cvt|6–21|m|ft}} over clearings or water bodies, hanging from dead or living trees like [[Dipterocarpaceae|dipeterocarps]] and ''[[Koompassia excelsa]]''. They have also been recorded being built on [[epiphytes]] like ''[[Pandanus]]'', [[ferns]] and bamboo. Nests are generally hung from a sideways branch close to the [[Trunk (botany)|trunk]], but are sometimes also suspended from thick leaves and bamboo tips. Nests have been observed being built close to the [[beehives]] of species like the [[giant honey bee]] (''Apis dorsata'') and [[Halictidae]] sweat bees, a strategy that is also seen in the black-and-yellow broadbill and which may provide protection. One nest in Borneo was observed being built over a period of 18{{Nbsp}}days,both adults participating in nest-building. The nests are large, raggedy and oval or pear-shaped, with a total length of {{Cvt|75–90|cm|in}}, including the trailing tail. Materials used to make the nest include leaves, twigs, roots, fibres, moss, leaf skeletons, grass stems and [[bryophytes]].<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" /> Both sexes have been observed collecting nesting material.<ref name=":2" /> The inner chamber is covered with leaves and thick grass stems, and the outside is embellished with [[lichen]], bryophytes, green moss, [[Frass|insect excreta]], cocoons and cobwebs, presumably to provide [[camouflage]]. The entrances to the nest are covered by a slanting [[Eaves|eave]]. A nest from [[Sabah]] had a height of {{Cvt|25|cm|in}}, a width of {{Cvt|22.5|cm|in}} and a depth of {{Cvt|15|cm|in}}, with an entrance measuring {{Cvt|54 × 58|mm|in}}.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />


The banded broadbill's eggs are oval-shaped and measure {{Cvt|26.1–31.5 × 17.1–22.2|mm|in}}. They have a smooth and slightly shiny surface and are usually dull white with dark purple or reddish-brown flecks, denser at the wide end; West Javan eggs are dirty white, sometimes tinged pink, with dense [[Rust (color)|rusty]]-brown to [[Lavender (color)|lavender]]-gray markings concentrated at the broader end. [[Clutch (eggs)|Clutches]] have generally two or three eggs, although they may sometimes have more. [[Egg incubation|Incubation]] can start before the completion of the nest and one bout of incubation was recorded being 1.8{{Nbsp}}hours long. Little is known about the species' hatching and parental care, but parents continue to provide 70–80% of food to young 13{{Nbsp}}weeks after [[fledging]], reducing to 20–30% by 20{{Nbsp}}weeks.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />
The banded broadbill's eggs are oval-shaped and measure {{Cvt|26.1–31.5 × 17.1–22.2|mm|in}}. They have a smooth and slightly shiny surface and are usually dull white with dark purple or reddish-brown flecks, denser at the wide end; West Javan eggs are dirty white, sometimes tinged pink, with dense rusty-brown to lavender-gray markings concentrated at the broader end. [[Clutch (eggs)|Clutches]] have generally two or three eggs, although they may sometimes have more. [[Egg incubation|Incubation]] can start before the completion of the nest and one bout of incubation was recorded being 1.8{{Nbsp}}hours long. Little is known about the species' hatching and parental care, but parents continue to provide 70–80% of food to young 13{{Nbsp}}weeks after [[fledging]], reducing to 20–30% by 20{{Nbsp}}weeks.<ref name="Wells2010" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" />


== Status ==
== Status ==
The [[International Union for Conservation of Nature]], which splits the banded broadbill into two species, classifies ''javanicus'' as being [[Near-threatened species|near-threatened]] and all the other subspecies as being of [[Least-concern species|least concern]]. Although it is patchily distributed and scarce in central and eastern Java, ''javanicus'' has also been observed in some [[protected areas]] like [[Mount Gede Pangrango National Park]]. Its population is unlikely to be above 10,000 adults and is thought to be decreasing. Threats to the subspecies include [[habitat loss]] and the [[cagebird trade]]. The remaining subspecies are mostly uncommon to locally common throughout their range, but have been described as being scarce in [[Brunei]] and very rare in northern Thailand. The populations inhabiting the Malay Peninsula are treated as being near-threatened. They are found in multiple protected areas.<ref name="iucn status javanicus" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" /><ref name="harterti iucn status">{{cite iucn |author=BirdLife International. |year=2016 |title=''Eurylaimus harterti'' |volume=2016 |page=e.T103656950A93700674 |doi=10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T103656950A93700674.en |access-date=18 April 2022}}</ref>
The [[International Union for Conservation of Nature]], which splits the banded broadbill into two species, classifies ''javanicus'' as being [[Near-threatened species|near-threatened]] and all the other subspecies as being of [[Least-concern species|least concern]]. Although it is patchily distributed and scarce in central and eastern Java, ''javanicus'' has also been observed in some [[protected areas]] like [[Mount Gede Pangrango National Park]]. Its population is unlikely to be above 10,000 adults and is thought to be decreasing. Threats to the subspecies include [[habitat loss]] and the [[cagebird trade]]. The remaining subspecies are mostly uncommon to locally common throughout their range, but have been described as being scarce in [[Brunei]] and very rare in northern Thailand. The populations inhabiting the Malay Peninsula are treated as being near-threatened. They are found in multiple protected areas.<ref name="iucn status javanicus" /><ref name="BOWspeciesaccount" /><ref name="harterti iucn status">{{cite iucn |author=BirdLife International. |year=2016 |title=Banded Broadbill |volume=2016 |page=e.T103656950A93700674 |doi=10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T103656950A93700674.en |access-date=18 April 2022}}</ref>


== Explanatory notes ==
== Explanatory notes ==

Revision as of 14:19, 4 October 2022

Banded broadbill
purplish-red bird with bright blue bill, black neckband, and black wings with yellow markings
Male of the subspecies pallidus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Eurylaimidae
Genus: Eurylaimus
Species:
E. javanicus
Binomial name
Eurylaimus javanicus
Horsfield, 1821
Map of Southeast Asia with green marking areas the banded broadbill is found
Range of the banded broadbill; nominate subspecies in light green and other subspecies in dark green
Synonyms[2]
  • Eurylaimus Javanicus (Horsfield, 1821)
  • Eurylaimus horsfieldii (Temminck, 1823)
  • Eurylaimus javanicus billitonis (Kloss, 1931)
  • Eurylaimus javanicus friedmanni (Deignan, 1947)

The banded broadbill (Eurylaimus javanicus) is a species of typical broadbill found in Mainland Southeast Asia and the Greater Sunda Islands. It is sometimes split into two species, one including only the nominate subspecies, E. j. javanicus, and one including all the remaining subspecies. It inhabits a variety of forests, along with forest edge, rubber plantations and Falcataria falcata groves, mainly in lowland areas. A striking, large-bodied bird with a length of 21.5–23.0 cm (8.5–9.1 in), it is unlikely to be mistaken for another species. The broadbill is mostly purplish-red, with yellow-streaked black wings, a bright blue beak, a blackish face and greyish chin and upper breast. Females can be told apart from males by their lack of a black neckband, although these are indistinct in Bornean and Javan males. Despite its conspicuous appearance, the species is usually hard to see due to its sluggishness and is usually only noticed when it vocalises.

The species mainly eats arthropods such as orthopterans (grasshoppers, katydids and crickets), true bugs and beetles, but has also been recorded feeding on snails, lizards, frogs and figs. On the mainland, breeding generally occurs during the dry season; populations in the Greater Sundas have a longer breeding season lasting from March to November. On Java, the broadbill is thought to breed year-round. Their large, raggedy nests are hung from trees at a height of 6–21 m (20–69 ft) over clearings or water bodies. Clutches have two or three eggs. The eggs are usually dull white with dark purple or reddish-brown flecks, but those from West Java are dirty white with dense rusty-brown to lavender-gray markings. The International Union for Conservation of Nature, which splits the banded broadbill into two species, classifies javanicus as being near-threatened and the other subspecies as being of least concern.

Taxonomy and systematics

The banded broadbill was described as Eurylaimus javanicus by the American naturalist Thomas Horsfield in 1821 based on specimens from Java. It is the type species of the genus Eurylaimus, which was created for it.[3] The name of the genus, Eurylaimus, derives from the Ancient Greek ευρυς, eurus, meaning broad, and λαιμος, laimos, meaning throat. The specific name javanicus comes from Java, the island on which it was discovered.[4] Banded broadbill is the official common name designated by the International Ornithologists' Union (IOU).[5] Another common name for the species is Javan broadbill.[6] The species is called takau rimba in Malay and Nok Phaya Paak Kwaang laay leuang in Thai.[7]

The banded broadbill is one of two species currently placed in the genus Eurylaimus, in the typical broadbill family Eurylaimidae, a family of nine tropical species native to Southeast Asia.[8] Based on a 2017 study by the Brazilian researcher Alexandre Selvatti and colleagues, its closest relative is the black-and-yellow broadbill. These two species are most closely related to a clade formed by the black-and-red and silver-breasted broadbills, and all three genera form a sister clade to the genus Sarcophanops. This larger clade is sister to one formed by the long-tailed broadbill and dusky broadbill. Both of these clades are sister to Grauer's broadbill. The following cladogram shows phylogenetic relationships among the Eurylaimidae, based on the above study:[a][10]

Eurylaimidae

Grauer's broadbill (Pseudocalyptomena graueri)

Long-tailed broadbill (Psarisomus dalhousiae)

Dusky broadbill (Corydon sumatranus)

Wattled broadbill (Sarcophanops steerii)

Silver-breasted broadbill (Serilophus lunatus)

Black-and-red broadbill (Cymbirhynchus macrorhynchos)

Banded broadbill (Eurylaimus javanicus)

Black-and-yellow broadbill (Eurylaimus ochromalus)

Four subspecies of the banded broadbill are currently recognised by the IOU:[5]

  • E. j. pallidus (Chasen, 1935):[b] found from southeastern Myanmar to Vietnam and the Malay Peninsula.[5] Populations from the northern Malay Peninsula are sometimes separated as E. j. friedmanni.[11] It is similar to harterti, but has more metallic grey underparts and pinker throats and upperparts.[12]
  • E. j. harterti (van Oort, 1909):[c] found on Sumatra, the Riau Archipelago, Bangka Island and Belitung.[5] The population from Belitung was previously recognised as E. j. billitonis, but this is not generally accepted any more.[11] It is larger than the nominate subspecies, with light blue-green irises, darker underparts, a more reddish upper back and a pink vent.[12]
  • E. j. javanicus (Horsfield, 1821): also known as the Javan broadbill, it is the nominate subspecies and found on Java.[5] It is smaller than the other subspecies, with a yellow (instead of blue) iris, a narrower breast-band, a yellow (instead of purplish) vent and a paler belly.[12]
  • E. j. brookei (Robinson & Kloss, 1919):[d] found on Borneo and the northern Natuna Islands.[5] Like harterti, but is pinker, with an indistinct neckband, blacker forehead and pinker throat.[12]

All the subspecies excluding javanicus are sometimes split as a separate species, E. harterti, on the basis of morphology, which would make the current species monotypic (having only one subspecies).[12] According to this scheme, the nominate subspecies is called the Javan broadbill,[1] and the three subspecies in E. harterti (harterti, brookei and pallidus) are called the banded broadbill.[14]

Description

banded broadbill dorsal view showing yellowish streaking on the black wings and tail
Adult from Sabah, Malaysian Borneo showing the markings on the wings and back

The banded broadbill is a striking, large-bodied bird, with a length of 21.5–23.0 cm (8.5–9.1 in). The weight of 10 adult pallidus specimens from the Malay Peninsula was 65.1–95.0 g (2.30–3.35 oz), males weighing slightly more than females. If seen clearly, the species is unlikely to be confused with any other bird. It may be mistaken for black-and-yellow broadbill, which differs in its smaller size, black head and contrasting white collar.[12]

Adult males of the nominate subspecies have a glossy purple-red head, which turns black towards the lores (region between the eyes and beak) and base of the bill. The chin, throat and ear-coverts are slightly lighter, with a black band across the neck; this neckband is sometimes faint or absent in males from Borneo and Java. The top of the head is glossy maroon black and turns grey towards the back of the neck. The upper back is maroon-tinged dark brown; the rest of the back is mostly black, except for a central line of yellow streaks. The primary feathers are dark brown, with thin yellow edges that are present as a yellow line on the bend of the wing. The remaining wing-coverts are blackish, with yellowish markings. The secondaries have bright yellow edges to their outer margins that form a well-marked, trapezoidal patch on the wing. The underparts are pale pinkish-violet to wine-red, with a grey tinge to the chin and upper breast and a pure grey breast-band. The tail is dark black and has white spots on the underside, the undertail-coverts are pale yellow and the rump has a variable black and yellow pattern. The brilliant turquoise blue beak is broad and hooked, edged green or black.[7][12] It is among the widest-billed broadbills, with a thick, heart-shaped and wide tongue that allows it to mash and "chew" its food, helping the species consume relatively large prey.[15][16] The irises are pale yellow in javanicus and sapphire blue in all other subspecies, and the legs are pale pinkish-brown to light greyish-blue with dull black feathering.[7][12]

frontal view of tan brown bird with black head and pale streaking perched on mossy branch
Juvenile in Mount Gede Pangrango National Park, West Java in August
side view of brownish bird with black wing and yellow markings
Juvenile in Sabah, Borneo in June

Females are similar to males, but can be told apart by their lack of a neckband and greyer heads and underparts. Juveniles have pale brown heads, brown upper backs, dark brown wings and black tails. They have a marked yellow supercilium (line above the eye) that widens towards the back of the neck to become a broken collar, and the ear-coverts have narrow yellow streaks. The upper back has irregular yellow spots and the back and rump are largely yellow. The wings have yellowish markings like those of adults. The throat is yellowish with pale dark streaks and is separated from the breast by a yellowish-white strip, the rest of the underparts being a pink-tinted yellow. The bill is orangish-brown. As juveniles age, the yellow on the body is gradually replaced with purple-pink, starting with the head and side of the neck. In Malaysia, moulting has been observed in all months except January and February and peaks from May to August. The primary feathers nearest the body are moulted first, and those further away moult later.[7][12]

Reddish colours in the banded broadbill's plumage are caused by the biological pigment 2,3-didehydro-papilioerythrinone, which is also found in the black-and-yellow broadbill, black-and-red broadbill and Sarcophanops species. The yellow in the species' plumage is caused by the carotenoid 7,8-dihydro-3′-dehydro-lutein, which is also present in the plumage of the black-and-yellow broadbill.[17]

Vocalisation

The species' song is a remarkable, short, loud wheeoo or wiuk, occasionally prefaced with 4–9 whirr notes and always followed with a noisy, high-speed, rattling trill lasting 5–9 seconds that initially rises in pitch before quickly falling. This song is frequently given by two birds one after the other, with neighbouring pairs then responding. It can be triggered by other sudden, loud sounds, but the response to playback (recorded birdsong) is usually sluggish. Other calls include a nasal whee-u, a squeaky kyeeow, a keowrr and a squealing keek-eek-eek similar to that of a black-and-red broadbill.[7][12] Soft calls made during wing displays are less squeaky and lower than similar ones made by black-and-yellow broadbills.[18]

Distribution and habitat

The banded broadbill is found in Mainland Southeast Asia and the Greater Sunda Islands. In Indochina, it is known from southern and central Vietnam, most of western and southern Thailand, most of Cambodia excluding the Tonlé Sap, southern and central Laos and the Tenasserim Hills and Karen Hills in southeastern Myanmar. In the Greater Sundas, the species inhabits Sumatra, Borneo, Java, Belitung, Bangka Island, the North Natuna Islands and the Riau Archipelago. It went locally extinct in Singapore around 1928; reports of its presence on Penang Island are unconfirmed. It is usually non-migratory, but reports of an individual or multiple individuals living in a tract of secondary forest on a former rubber plantation in Kuala Lumpur over a period of three years indicates that the species wanders upon the loss of its usual habitat.[7][12]

The species inhabits several types of forest, including primary forests, selectively logged forests that have regrown, peat swamp forests, high-altitude heath forests, freshwater swamp forests, forest edge, rubber plantations and Falcataria falcata groves. On the mainland, it is commonest in evergreen and mixed deciduous forests, but is also seen in adjacent gardens and villages, as well as secondary forests. On Java, it is usually seen in forest edge, especially on mountain slopes. Despite mainly being a lowland species, the banded broadbill is found up to elevations of 1,050–1,100 m (3,440–3,610 ft) on the Malay Peninsula and Sumatra, 1,100 m (3,600 ft) in Laos, 1,200 m (3,900 ft) in Cambodia and 1,220 m (4,000 ft) on Borneo. On Java, it is typically found at altitudes of 485–915 m (1,591–3,002 ft), but is sometimes as high as 1,500 m (4,900 ft).[7][12]

Behaviour and ecology

Despite the banded broadbill's distinctive and conspicuous colouration, it is generally hard to observe due to its lethargic habits and is generally only seen due to its loud song.[12] It is known to make wing and gaping displays similar to those of the black-and-yellow broadbill. Wing displays include raising the wings slightly above the back and then slowly opening and closing the flight feathers, and are made after singing, foraging or in response to playback. They may include just one wing and are sometimes complemented with a tail wag. Gaping displays are conducted by opening and closing the bill measuredly without making any sounds. These displays are performed both when alone and in the presence of other banded broadbills, and have been observed being performed near nests. They are also sometimes accompanied by soft calls.[18]

Feeding

Adult banded broadbill giving a large arthropod to a juvenile with its beak open
Adult banded broadbill feeding juvenile in Sabah

The banded broadbill's diet includes arthropods, small vertebrates and fruit. Its main prey is orthopterans (grasshoppers, katydids and crickets) with an average length of 55 mm (2.2 in). It also feeds on true bugs (Hemiptera), snails, spiders and beetles such as ground beetles (Carabidae), darkling beetles (Tenebrionidae) and true weevils (Curculionidae). Small fruit like Ficus figs are also eaten, although their importance in the species' diet is unknown. The broadbill has been recorded eating lizards up to 10 cm (3.9 in) long and frogs, eating both head-first.[7][12]

Like other broadbills, the species forages in a sluggish manner. It has a toothed bill-tip and spends the majority of its time still-hunting, taking off from high perches and grabbing prey from nearby branches and the undersides of leaves. Except for probing head movements, often upwards, the broadbill is generally motionless. It has been observed making erratic, fluttering flights to glean prey before perching again, as well as catching prey in flight in a more elegant manner. Pairs and small flocks that are thought to be family groups are active throughout the day, occasionally joining mixed-species foraging flocks.[7][12]

Breeding

On the Malay Peninsula, breeding in the banded broadbill usually takes place in the dry season following the East Asian Monsoon. The only recorded nest from Myanmar was observed in Tenasserim on 21 March. In Peninsular Malaysia, nests have been seen in February and March and immatures from early April to early September, extrapolating to eggs being laid from March to May and in July. Observances of nests and immatures in Thailand are at later times than in Malaysia, reflecting the passage of the monsoon. In Laos, immatures have been seen in June, indicating that breeding took place at the beginning of the wet season, instead of the dry season like the rest of the peninsula. The breeding season is lengthier on the Greater Sunda Islands, lasting from March to November. On Borneo, adults have been observed collecting nesting material in March and a recently fledged bird was seen in September; males with enlarged testicles have been collected from March to July. The banded broadbill's breeding season is particularly prolonged on Sumatra and Java. Immatures have been observed in March, July, September and November on Sumatra and eggs have been collected from Belitung in April. On Java, the species may breed throughout the year, with nests collected in April, June and December and immatures between March and December.[7][12]

Like other typical broadbills, the banded broadbill's nests are usually made at a height of 6–21 m (20–69 ft) over clearings or water bodies, hanging from dead or living trees like dipeterocarps and Koompassia excelsa. They have also been recorded being built on epiphytes like Pandanus, ferns and bamboo. Nests are generally hung from a sideways branch close to the trunk, but are sometimes also suspended from thick leaves and bamboo tips. Nests have been observed being built close to the beehives of species like the giant honey bee (Apis dorsata) and Halictidae sweat bees, a strategy that is also seen in the black-and-yellow broadbill and which may provide protection. One nest in Borneo was observed being built over a period of 18 days,both adults participating in nest-building. The nests are large, raggedy and oval or pear-shaped, with a total length of 75–90 cm (30–35 in), including the trailing tail. Materials used to make the nest include leaves, twigs, roots, fibres, moss, leaf skeletons, grass stems and bryophytes.[7][12] Both sexes have been observed collecting nesting material.[18] The inner chamber is covered with leaves and thick grass stems, and the outside is embellished with lichen, bryophytes, green moss, insect excreta, cocoons and cobwebs, presumably to provide camouflage. The entrances to the nest are covered by a slanting eave. A nest from Sabah had a height of 25 cm (9.8 in), a width of 22.5 cm (8.9 in) and a depth of 15 cm (5.9 in), with an entrance measuring 54 mm × 58 mm (2.1 in × 2.3 in).[7][12]

The banded broadbill's eggs are oval-shaped and measure 26.1 mm–31.5 mm × 17.1 mm–22.2 mm (1.03 in–1.24 in × 0.67 in–0.87 in). They have a smooth and slightly shiny surface and are usually dull white with dark purple or reddish-brown flecks, denser at the wide end; West Javan eggs are dirty white, sometimes tinged pink, with dense rusty-brown to lavender-gray markings concentrated at the broader end. Clutches have generally two or three eggs, although they may sometimes have more. Incubation can start before the completion of the nest and one bout of incubation was recorded being 1.8 hours long. Little is known about the species' hatching and parental care, but parents continue to provide 70–80% of food to young 13 weeks after fledging, reducing to 20–30% by 20 weeks.[7][12]

Status

The International Union for Conservation of Nature, which splits the banded broadbill into two species, classifies javanicus as being near-threatened and all the other subspecies as being of least concern. Although it is patchily distributed and scarce in central and eastern Java, javanicus has also been observed in some protected areas like Mount Gede Pangrango National Park. Its population is unlikely to be above 10,000 adults and is thought to be decreasing. Threats to the subspecies include habitat loss and the cagebird trade. The remaining subspecies are mostly uncommon to locally common throughout their range, but have been described as being scarce in Brunei and very rare in northern Thailand. The populations inhabiting the Malay Peninsula are treated as being near-threatened. They are found in multiple protected areas.[1][12][14]

Explanatory notes

  1. ^ The study did not include the Visayan broadbill, which was formerly considered conspecific with the wattled broadbill.[9][10]
  2. ^ pallidus means pale and is derived from the Modern Latin pallidus, meaning pallid.[4]
  3. ^ harterti is an eponym in honour of Ernst Johann Otto Hartert, a German ornithologist and natural history collector.[4]
  4. ^ brookei is an eponym in honour of Charles Vyner Brooke, the third and last of the White Rajahs of Sarawak.[13]

References

  1. ^ a b c BirdLife International (2016). "Javan Broadbill". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2016: e.T103656944A104031815. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2016-3.RLTS.T103656944A104031815.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ Dekker, René W. R. J.; Dickinson, Edward C.; Eck, Siegfried; Somadikarta, Soekarja (2000). "Systematic notes on Asian birds. 3. Types of the Eurylaimidae" (PDF). Zoologische Verhandelingen (331): 80. ISSN 0024-1652. Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 May 2021. Retrieved 16 April 2022.
  3. ^ Horsfield, Thomas (1821). "Systematic arrangement and description of birds from the island of Java". Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. 13 (1): 133–200. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8339.1821.tb00061.x. Retrieved 30 December 2021 – via Biodiversity Heritage Library.
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