The rainbow pitta is a small passerine bird in the pitta family, Pittidae, endemic to northern Australia. It has a velvet black head with chestnut stripes above the eyes, olive green upper parts, black underparts, a bright red belly and an olive green tail. Although the species has a small global range, it is locally common and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed it as being of least concern.
About Rainbow pitta in brief

Pairs defend territories and breed during the rainy season, as that time of year provides the most food for nestlings. The female lays three to five blotched eggs inside its large domed nest. Both parents defend the nest, incubate the eggs and feed the chicks. The wings are green with a golden sheen and have a shining blue patch on the lesser wing coverts, and the flight feathers and underwing are black. The tail is olive-green with a black base and the uppertail coverts sometimes have a silvery-blue band across them. The plumage is essentially the same for both sexes; females may have slightly more buff-yellow in their flanks and a slightly different shade of red on the lower belly, but these differences do not make the sexes distinguishable by plumage. The specific name iris is taken from the Ancient Greek for ‘rainbow’; this is the origin of the common name as well. It typically stands upright while looking for food or resting, with the legs slightly bent and the body held at a 60–70° angle. It moves around by hopping. The bird is most commonly found in monsoon forest and adjacent vine-scrub forest and bamboo forests, also occurs in eucallypt forest, bamboo forest, paperbark forest and gallery forest.
You want to know more about Rainbow pitta?
This page is based on the article Rainbow pitta published in Wikipedia (as of Nov. 07, 2020) and was automatically summarized using artificial intelligence.






