A Clamorous reed warbler at a lake near Enathur in Kancheepuram district on March 15, 2026. For a sense of how far this lake is from Chennai, it is around 62 kilometres from the section of Pallikaranai marsh found on the 200-feet Thoraipakkam-Pallavaram Radial Road.

A Clamorous reed warbler at a lake near Enathur in Kancheepuram district on March 15, 2026. For a sense of how far this lake is from Chennai, it is around 62 kilometres from the section of Pallikaranai marsh found on the 200-feet Thoraipakkam-Pallavaram Radial Road.
| Photo Credit: PRINCE FREDERICK

If there is an unabashedly explicit and comprehensively explanatory name under the sun, it is “Clamorous reed warbler”. It encapsulates the species’ social behaviour (trying to shout down everything it encounters within earshot) and habitat preference (reeds, specifically bulrushes). Even its binomial name, Acrocephalus stentoreus underlines its boundless capacity for stentorian cries.

In habitats within Chennai limits, its shouting matches might be on a lower key, its competition being aided by “foreign powers”.  Motor vehicles “talk” over the Clamorous reed warbler, the steady hum of running engines drowning its throaty, grating, loud calls. Infrastructure works bring their own din. The Clamorous reed warbler might also find its ranks dwindling in urban habitats with loss of reed beds made up by bulrushes.  In many parts of the Indian subcontinent, resident populations of the Clamorous reed warbler can be found. In some parts, it is a mix of resident and migratory populations.


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