Kingfishers use their long, sharp bills to snag their prey. As the name suggests, they can be experts at plucking fish from the water, but many kingfishers do not eat fish at all. These non-fishing kingfishers are still pros at catching invertebrates and even vertebrates (I have seen a kingfisher eat another bird in Israel!). Let's take a look at some of East Africa's spectacular kingfishers.
The malachite kingfisher (Alcedo cristata) spends its time around marshes and swamps and catches aquatic critters. Mabamba Swamp, Uganda |
The blue-breasted kingfisher (Halcyon malimbica) is a species that hunts in the forest. Mabira Forest Reserve, Uganda |
A pied kingfisher gets ready for a dive into Lake Victoria, Uganda. Pied kingfishers are a very widespread species; we first saw them in Israel. |
A juvenile brown-headed kingfisher (Halcyon albiventris) in Arusha National Park, Tanzania. |
The giant kingfisher (Megaceryle maxima) is actually the largest kingfisher species in the world. Near Wildlife Education Center in Entebbe, Uganda |
A striped kingfisher (Halycon chelicuti) waits in a palm tree in some dry country, west of Arusha, Tanzania. |
We did see two other species in Tanzania, the grey-headed kingfisher and the half-collared kingfisher, but we did not get pictures. You can probably find kingfishers near you, on any continent (ok, not Antarctica, but that is definitely not near you). In North America, the belted kingfisher is fairly common, but it is easy to miss unless you go looking for it. I have seen them at the New York Botanical Garden and Pelham Bay Park in the Bronx, New York City, and at Leawood City Park, right in suburban Kansas City.
For more information on kingfishers, you can get detailed information on their taxonomy at Don Roberson's Bird Families of the World. It is one of my favorite resources for information on bird diversity.
For information on the belted kingfisher, check out the Cornell Lab of Ornithology All About Birds site.
Also, you can check a field guide to the birds of your area. For African species, I use the following three books (all are worthwhile and have distinctive strengths):
- Fanshawe and Stevenson. Birds of East Africa. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2002.
- Pearson, Turner, and Zimmerman. Birds of Kenya and Northern Tanzania. London: Christopher Helm, 1999.
- Ryan and Sinclair. Birds of Africa south of the Sahara. Struik Nature: Cape Town, 2003.
No comments:
Post a Comment