The male has white cheeks and throat, pale creamy bill, and rufous-brown underparts.
It feeds on fruit and small animals; its diet includes many species of fruits, together with many arthropods, also bats, snakes, lizards, snails, earthworms, and chicks and eggs of other birds.
It is a co-operative breeder, with a dominant breeding pair, male helpers and additional females.
[3] [4] They nest in natural cavities or in old holes of the great slaty woodpecker.
In India, the best place to see this species is the Namdapha National Park, Changlang District, Arunachal Pradesh.