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Common Kingfisher - BirdForum Opus

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Photo © by Gerd Rossen
Flensburg, northern Germany
Alcedo atthis

Identification

Female
Photo © by jbpixels
Nakhon Sawan, Thailand, November 2019

Size: Slightly larger than a sparrow at 16-19.5cm (6¼-7¾ in); wing span averaging 7.5 cm

Adult: bright metallic blue-green wings and crown, cobalt or azure blue back. The ear coverts and under parts are warm orange-brown to chestnut, the chin and sides of neck white. Light red legs

The bill of the female is blackish and reddish orange at the base; the bill of the male is all black.
Juvenile: the bill is black, grey legs and colours are duller

Similar species

Some races (e.g. hispidoides) are very similar to Blue-eared Kingfisher (which see).

Distribution

Juvenile
Photo © by peterow
Yarrow Valley Park, Lancashire, August 2018

A widespread and fairly common bird over much of its range. In Europe breeds in Ireland and southern Britain and from Iberia east to the southern Urals, the Caspian and Caucasus. In the north breeds in Denmark, the far south of Norway, southern Sweden where decreasing, extreme southern Finland and across Russia south of 60 dg N. Breeds along much of the north Mediterranean coast east to Greece and occurs on Corsica and Sardinia, Sicily, Crete, and Cyprus, but very local in Turkey.
Also local in North-West Africa where breeds in parts of Morocco, north-east Algeria and north-west Tunisia.
Breeds in Central Asia and in eastern Asia in China, Korea, and Japan. In India breeds from the Himalayas south to Sri Lanka and the Andaman Islands, also throughout South-East Asia south to Indonesia, and in eastern New Guinea and the Bismarck Archipelago.

Resident over much of range but a summer vistor to eastern Europe, Central Asia and north-east Asia.
Migrants leave breeding grounds in August-October to winter further south and return in April-May. Other populations are partial migrants or merely dispersive, often short distances to coastal areas. Widespread in winter, especially around the Mediterranean islands and the western shores of the Mediterranean, Nile Delta and Red Sea coasts.

Recorded as a vagrant in Mauritania, Madeira, and the Canary Islands.

Taxonomy

Subspecies A. a. taprobana
Photo © by Alok Tewari
Amboli, Alt. 22-2500ft., Western Ghats, Dist. Sindhudurg, Maharashtra, India, February-2019

Subspecies

Subspecies A. a. bengalensis
Photo © by Alok Tewari
Keoladeo National Park, India, Dec-2014

Clements recognises the following subspecies [1]:

Birds from Sakhalin, Japan, and Taiwan are sometimes separated as japonica (otherwise included in bengalensis).

Habitat

Photo © by targetman
Lincolnshire, October 2010

Streams and small rivers are the preferred habitat in the breeding season, sometimes canals but must have trees to provide lookout perches and banks suitable for nesting.

In the tropics found along forested riverbanks and mangrove swamps.

Wider range of freshwaters used in winter including larger ponds, lakes and reservoirs and also estuaries and sheltered sea-coasts.

Behaviour

Breeding

The nest is a chamber at the end of a tunnel excavated into a sandy bank

Diet

Food is mostly small fish or amphibians caught on dives from a perch or from a hovering bird.

Vocalisation

Flight Call: a short sharp zii

References

  1. Clements, J. F., P. C. Rasmussen, T. S. Schulenberg, M. J. Iliff, T. A. Fredericks, J. A. Gerbracht, D. Lepage, A. Spencer, S. M. Billerman, B. L. Sullivan, and C. L. Wood. 2023. The eBird/Clements checklist of Birds of the World: v2023. Downloaded from https://www.birds.cornell.edu/clementschecklist/download/
  2. Collins Bird Guide ISBN 0 00 219728 6

Recommended Citation

External Links


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