The chestnut-capped thrush (Geokichla interpres) lives in forests and woodlands of Southeast Asia.
Traditionally, it has included the Enggano thrush as a subspecies, but a recent review recommended treating them as separate.
Its face is black with a white mark on the cheeks and another on the lores.
The superficially similar chestnut-backed thrush is substantially larger when seen alongside one another, and has a black crown and rufous back, whereas the Enggano thrush has an olive-ochre back and little or no white on the lores and auriculars.
According to ISIS, Chester Zoo had the only female outside of Asia, until she died in 2007.