They are very common in India, and are usually solitary foragers but numbers of them may sometimes feed in close proximity during the dry seasons
Food and feeding The Indian pond heron's feeding habitat is marshy wetlands. They usually feed at the edge of ponds but make extensive use of floating vegetation such as
water hyacinth to access deeper water. They may also on occasion swim on water or fish from the air and land in deeper waters. They have also been observed to fly and capture fishes leaping out of water. Sometimes, they fly low over water to drive frogs and fishes towards the shore before settling along the shoreline. They have been noted to pick up crumbs of bread and drop them on the water surface to bait fishes. The primary food of these birds includes crustaceans, aquatic insects, fishes, tadpoles and sometimes leeches (
Herpobdelloides sp.). Outside wetlands, these herons feed on
insects (including crickets, dragonflies and bees),
fish (
Barilius noted as important in a study in Chandigarh) and
amphibians.
Breeding ,
West Bengal, India The breeding season begins with the onset of the
monsoons. They nest in small colonies, often with other wading birds, usually on platforms of sticks in trees or shrubs. Most nests are built at a height of about 9 to 10 m in large leafy trees. The nest material is collected by the male while the female builds the nest. Three to five
eggs are laid. The eggs hatch asynchronously, taking 18 to 24 days to hatch. Both parents feed the young. Fish are the main diet fed to young. Nest sites that are not disturbed may be reused year after year.
Mortality factors They have few predators but injured birds may be taken by birds of prey. An arbovirus that causes "Balagodu", trematodes and several other parasites have been isolated from the species. Antibodies to
Japanese encephalitis and
West Nile virus has been detected in pond herons and cattle egrets from southern India. Traces of heavy metals acquired from feeding in polluted waters may be particularly concentrated in the tail feathers. ==In culture==