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	 Jerdon's baza (Aviceda jerdoni), African cuckoo-hawk (Aviceda cuculoides)
|  | Query: british birds | Result: 462nd of 534 |  | 
 
| Subject: | Jerdon's baza (Aviceda jerdoni), African cuckoo-hawk (Aviceda cuculoides) 
 |  | Poster: | Wiki Photos (---@---.---) 
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File Size: 216125 Bytes
Upload Date: 2017:04:24 13:41:49 | 
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ERROR : Server Busy(-1105) Jerdon's baza (Aviceda jerdoni), African cuckoo-hawk (Aviceda cuculoides) 1. (above) Baza sumatrensis Lafr. = Aviceda jerdoni jerdoni (Blyth,1842)
 2. (below) [Baza] cuculoides Sw. = Aviceda cuculoides cuculoides (Swainson, 1837)
 English: Jerdon's Baza (above), African Cuckoo-hawk (below)
 Date	1874
 Source	Catalogue of the birds in the British Museum (Vol. 1 Plate XI)
 Author	John Gerrard Keulemans  (1842–1912), Richard Bowdler Sharpe (text)
 Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:BazaSumatrensisKeulemans.jpg
 
 Jerdon's baza (Aviceda jerdoni) is a moderate sized brown hawk with a thin white-tipped black crest usually held erect. It is found in South-east Asia. It inhabits foothills in the terai and is rarer in evergreen forests and tea estates. The common name and Latin binomial commemorate the surgeon-naturalist Thomas C. Jerdon.
 
 The African cuckoo-hawk, or African baza, (Aviceda cuculoides) is a medium-sized raptor in the family Accipitridae so named because it resembles the common cuckoo, which is found in sub-Saharan Africa and along the eastern parts of Southern Africa. It prefers dense woodland and forest of either indigenous or exotic trees.
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