
The cochoas (from cocho, Nepali for Cochoa purpurea) are medium-sized frugivorous, insectivorous and molluscivorous birds in the genus Cochoa. Their bright contrasting plumage patterns, sexual dimorphism and feeding habits made their systematic position difficult to ascertain in early times, Richard Bowdler Sharpe placed them with the Prionopidae in 1879 while many considered them as some kind of aberrant thrush. The genus was previously included in the Old World flycatcher family Muscicapidae but molecular phylogenetic studies have shown that it is more closely related to the thrush family Tu
GENUS
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The cochoas (from cocho, Nepali for Cochoa purpurea) are medium-sized frugivorous, insectivorous and molluscivorous birds in the genus Cochoa. Their bright contrasting plumage patterns, sexual dimorphism and feeding habits made their systematic position difficult to ascertain in early times, Richard Bowdler Sharpe placed them with the Prionopidae in 1879 while many considered them as some kind of aberrant thrush. The genus was previously included in the Old World flycatcher family Muscicapidae but molecular phylogenetic studies have shown that it is more closely related to the thrush family Turdidae. ==Species== These are southeast Asian forest-dwelling species, often found near water. The genus contains the following species: {| class="wikitable" |- ! Image !! Common name !! Scientific name !! Distribution |- |120px ||Purple cochoa|| Cochoa purpurea||Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, India, Laos, Myanmar, Nepal, Thailand, and Vietnam |- |120px ||Green cochoa|| Cochoa viridis|| Cambodia, China, India, Laos, Myanmar, Nepal, Thailand, Vietnam, and possibly Bhutan. |- |120px ||Sumatran cochoa|| Cochoa beccarii||Indonesia. |- | ||Javan cochoa|| Cochoa azurea|| Indonesia. |- |}
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).