Eyebrowed Thrush (Turdus obscurus)
The summer breeding range of this species extends throughout central and eastern Siberia, south into northern Mongolia and east into the Russian Far East; the wintering range of this species extends from northeast India in the west to Taiwan in the east, and south throughout Indochina and the Malay Peninsula into the Greater Sundas and Philippines.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Grey-sided Thrush (Turdus feae)
The summer breeding range of this species extends throughout northeast China; the wintering range of this species extends patchily from northeast India, through Myanmar to northwest Thailand.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Izu Thrush (Turdus celaenops)
The range of this species is restricted to the Izu Islands and northern Ryukyu Islands.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Brown-headed Thrush (Turdus chrysolaus)
The summer breeding range of this species extends from Sakhalin and the Kuril Islands into Japan as far south as central Honshu; the wintering range of this species extends throughout central and southern Japan and into the Ryukyu Islands, Taiwan, Hainan and the northern Philippines.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Pale Thrush (Turdus pallidus)
The summer breeding range of this species extends throughout northeast China, the Russian Far East and northern Korea, with populations in southern Korea resident; the wintering range of this species extends to the east into central and southern Japan, and to the south into southeast China and Taiwan.
Monotypic.
Photo by
@Goura
Island Thrush (Turdus poliocephalus)
The range of this species extends in a highly-fragmented and patchy distribution throughout the islands of southeast Asia, Melanesia and west-central Polynesia, from Sumatra in the west and the Philippines in the north, to Tonga and Samoa in the east. Several races, including the nominate, are extinct.
Forty-seven extant subspecies are recognised:
T. p. loeseri
T. p. indrapurae
T. p. fumidus
T. p. erythropleurus - photo by
@Hix
T. p. javanicus .
T. p. stresemanni
T. p. whiteheadi
T. p. thomassoni
T. p. mayonensis
T. p. mindorensis
T. p. nigrorum
T. p. malindangensis
T. p. katanglad
T. p. kelleri
T. p. seebohmi
T. p. hygroscopus
T. p. celebensis
T. p. schlegelii
T. p. sterlingi
T. p. deningeri
T. p. versteegi
T. p. erebus
T. p. keysseri
T. p. papuensis
T. p. tolokiwae
T. p. beehleri
T. p. heinrothi
T. p. canescens
T. p. bougainvillei
T. p. kulambangrae
T. p. sladeni
T. p. rennellianus
T. p. vanikorensis
T. p. placens
T. p. whitneyi
T. p. malekulae
T. p. becki
T. p. efatensis
T. p. albifrons
T. p. pritzbueri
T. p. xanthopus
T. p. layardi
T. p. ruficeps
T. p. vitiensis
T. p. hades
T. p. tempesti
T. p. samoensis
White-backed Thrush (Turdus kessleri)
The range of this species is restricted to the eastern and northeastern Tibetan Plateau.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Tibetan Blackbird (Turdus maximus)
The range of this species extends patchily throughout the Himalayas from northwest Pakistan to northeast India, and north into southeast Tibet; wintering populations are present in the southern foothills of the Himalayas.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Fieldfare (
Turdus pilaris)
The summer breeding range of this species extends from Scandinavia and European Russia in the west to central and eastern Siberia in the east, and south from here into northern Mongolia and northeast China; resident populations are present throughout central and eastern Europe, southern Scandinavia and southwest Russia. The wintering range of this species extends throughout western Europe from the British Isles south to the Iberian Peninsula and North Africa, and east throughout southern Europe, Asia Minor and the Middle East, the Caucasus and Central Asia.
Monotypic.
Photo by
@Vision
White-collared Blackbird (Turdus albocinctus)
The range of this species extends throughout the Himalayas from northern India in the west to southern China in the east, with non-breeding populations located in the southern Himalayan foothills of northeast India.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Chestnut Thrush (Turdus rubrocanus)
The range of this species extends throughout the Himalayas from the Afghan-Pakistan border in the west to northern Myanmar and southern China in the east, north from here throughout the Tibetan Plateau and central China, and patchily south of here into Indochina; the portion of the range extending through the central and eastern Himalayas and Indochina represent wintering or otherwise non-breeding populations.
Two subspecies recognised:
T. r. rubrocanus
T. r. gouldii
No photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Ring Ouzel (Turdus torquatus)
The summer breeding range of this species extends patchily throughout western and northerrn Europe, and through southern Europe into Asia Minor, the Caucasus and northern Iran; the wintering range of this species extends throughout the Iberian Peninsula and northwest Africa, and patchily to the east through the Mediterranean coastline, the Middle East and the Iranian lowlands.
Three subspecies recognised:
T. t. torquatus
T. t. alpestris
T. t. amicorum
No photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Naumann's Thrush (Turdus naumanni)
The summer breeding range of this species extends throughout south-central and eastern Siberia, and into the Russian Far East; the wintering range of this species extends from the southern reaches of the Russian Far East into northeast and eastern China, northern Korea and south to Taiwan.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Dusky Thrush (Turdus eunomus)
The summer breeding range of this species extends throughout north-central and northeast Siberia, and south into Kamchatka; the wintering range of this species extends throughout Japan and the Korean Peninsula, and into eastern and southeast China and northern Indochina.
Monotypic.
Photo by
@alexkant
Black-throated Thrush (Turdus atrogularis)
The summer breeding range of this species extends from western Siberia into central Siberia, northwest China and northern Mongolia; the wintering range of this species extends south of this range through Tien Shan to the foothills of the Himalayas, east from here throughout north-central India and the Himalayas as far as Bhutan, northeast India and southern China, and west throughout the Middle East and northeast Arabian Peninsula.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
Rufous-throated Thrush (Turdus ruficollis)
The summer breeding range of this species extends throughout south-central Siberia, northwest Mongolia and northwest China; the wintering range of this species extends patchily throughout the Himalayas from northwest Pakistan to northern Myanmar and southern China.
Monotypic; no photographs of this species are present in the Zoochat gallery.
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