Copsychus malabaricus
0 sources
Copsychus malabaricus
Summary
Copsychus malabaricus is a taxon[1]. It ranks in the top 0.77% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (123 views/month, #1,508 of 195,241).[2]
Key Facts
- Copsychus malabaricus's image is recorded as White-rumped Shama 0A2A8545 (cropped).jpg[3].
- Copsychus malabaricus's image is recorded as Copsychus malabaricus - Khao Yai.jpg[4].
- Copsychus malabaricus's instance of is recorded as taxon[5].
- Copsychus malabaricus's taxon rank is recorded as species[6].
- Copsychus malabaricus's IUCN conservation status is recorded as Least Concern[7].
- Copsychus malabaricus's parent taxon is recorded as Copsychus[8].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Baisipali Wildlife Sanctuary[9].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Ramanagara Ramdevara Betta Vulture Sanctuary[10].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Buxa Tiger Reserve[11].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Nameri National Park[12].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Gorumara National Park[13].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Chapramari Wildlife Sanctuary[14].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Rabindra Sarobar[15].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Neora Valley National Park[16].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Mahananda Wildlife Sanctuary[17].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Jaldapara National Park[18].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Murguma Dam[19].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Dehing Patkai National Park[20].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Kaziranga National Park[21].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Manas National Park[22].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Orang National Park[23].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Amchang Wildlife Sanctuary[24].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Bherjan Reserve Forest[25].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Dipor Bil[26].
- Copsychus malabaricus's endemic to is recorded as Dibru-Saikhowa National Park[27].
Why It Matters
Copsychus malabaricus ranks in the top 0.77% of taxon entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (123 views/month, #1,508 of 195,241).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 19 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] It is known by 13 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]