River kingfishers

River kingfishers
Common kingfisher (Alcedo atthis)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Coraciiformes
Suborder: Alcedines
Family: Alcedinidae
Subfamily: Alcedininae
Genera

Alcedo
Ceyx
Corythornis
Ispidina

The river kingfishers or Alcedininae, are one of the three subfamilies of birds in the kingfisher group. The Alcedinidae once included all kingfishers, before the widespread recognition of Halcyoninae (tree kingfishers) and Cerylinae (water kingfishers). The subfamily is widespread through Africa and east and south Asia as far as Australia, with one species, the common kingfisher (Alcedo atthis) also appearing in Europe and northern Asia. The origin of the family is thought to have been in Asia.

These are brightly plumaged, compact birds with short tails, large heads, and long bills. They feed on insects or fish, and lay white eggs in a self-excavated burrow. Both adults incubate the eggs and feed the chicks.

Taxonomy

The river kingfishers family Alcedininae is in the order Coraciiformes, which also includes the motmots, bee-eaters, todies, rollers, ground-rollers, and two other subfamilies of kingfishers. The rollers do not appear to be particularly closely related to the others groups, and the Coraciiformes are therefore probably polyphyletic. In the past, all kingfishers were placed in the Alcedinidae, but it became clear that the three subfamilies diverged early.[1]

The taxonomy of the family is uncertain at present; it includes 22 to 24 species in two to four genera. The uncertainty arises from two small African species. The African dwarf kingfisher is sometimes placed in the monospecific genus Myioceyx, and sometimes with the pygmy kingfishers in Ispidina. However, molecular analysis suggests that the Madagascan pygmy kingfisher is most closely related to the malachite kingfisher.[2]

Species in taxonomic sequence
Common name Binomial
Genus Alcedo
Blyth's kingfisher Alcedo hercules
Common kingfisher Alcedo atthis
Half-collared kingfisher Alcedo semitorquata
Shining-blue kingfisher Alcedo quadribrachys
Blue-eared kingfisher Alcedo meninting
Azure kingfisher Alcedo azurea
Bismarck kingfisher Alcedo websteri
Blue-banded kingfisher Alcedo euryzona
Cerulean kingfisher Alcedo coerulescens
Little kingfisher Alcedo pusilla
Genus Ceyx
Oriental dwarf kingfisher Ceyx erithacus
Philippine dwarf kingfisher Ceyx melanurus
Southern silvery kingfisher Ceyx argentatus
Northern silvery kingfisher Ceyx flumenicola
Sulawesi dwarf kingfisher Ceyx fallax
Rufous-backed kingfisher Ceyx rufidorsa
Moluccan dwarf kingfisher Ceyx lepidus
Dimorphic dwarf kingfisher Ceyx margarethae
Sula dwarf kingfisher Ceyx wallacii
Buru dwarf kingfisher Ceyx cajeli
Papuan dwarf kingfisher Ceyx solitarius
Manus dwarf kingfisher Ceyx dispar
New Ireland dwarf kingfisher Ceyx mulcatus
New Britain dwarf kingfisher Ceyx sacerdotis
North Solomons dwarf kingfisher Ceyx meeki
New Georgia dwarf kingfisher Ceyx collectoris
Malaita dwarf kingfisher Ceyx malaitae
Guadalcanal dwarf kingfisher Ceyx nigromaxilla
Makira dwarf kingfisher Ceyx gentianus
Indigo-banded kingfisher Ceyx cyanopecta
Genus Corythornis
Malachite kingfisher Corythornis cristatus
Malagasy kingfisher Corythornis vintsioides
White-bellied kingfisher Corythornis leucogaster
Madagascan pygmy kingfisher Corythornis madagascariensis
Genus Ispidina
African pygmy kingfisher Ispidina picta
African dwarf kingfisher Ispidina lecontei

Description

All kingfishers are short-tailed large-headed compact birds with long pointed bills. Like other Coraciiformes, they are brightly coloured. Alcedo species typically have metallic blue upperparts and head, and orange or white underparts. The sexes may be identical, as with Bismarck kingfisher, but most species show some sexual dimorphism, ranging from a different bill colour as with common kingfisher to a completely different appearance. The male blue-banded kingfisher has white underparts with a blue breast band, whereas the female has orange underparts.[3]

The small kingfishers that make up the rest of the family have blue or orange upperparts and white or buff underparts, and show little sexual variation.[3] Across the family, the bill colour is linked to diet. The insectivorous species have red bills, and the fish-eaters have black bills.[4]

When perched, kingfishers sit quite upright, and the flight is fast and direct. The call is typically a simple high-pitched squeak, often given in flight.[5]

Distribution and habitat

Most alcedinids are found in the warm climates of Africa and southern and southeast Asia. Three species reach Australia, but only the common kingfisher is found across most of Europe and temperate Asia. No members of this family are found in the Americas, although the American green kingfishers are believed to have derived from alcedinid stock. The origin of the family is thought to have been in southern Asia, which still has the most species.[6]

The Ceyx and Ispidina species are mainly birds of wet rainforest or other woodland, and are not necessarily associated with water. The Alcedo kingfishers are usually closely associated with fresh water, often in open habitats although some are primarily forest birds.[5]

Behaviour

Breeding

River kingfishers are monogamous and territorial. The pair excavates a burrow in an earth bank and lays two or more white eggs onto the bare surface. Both parents incubate the eggs and feed the chicks.[5] Egg laying is staggered at one-day intervals so that if food is short only the older larger nestlings get fed. The chicks are naked, blind and helpless when they hatch, and stand on their heels, unlike any adult bird.[7]

Feeding

The small Ceyx and Ispidina species feed mainly on insects and spiders, but also take tadpoles, frogs and mayfly nymphs from puddles. The will flycatch, and their bills are red bills are flattened to assist in the capture of insects. The Alcedo kingfishers are typically fish-eaters with black bills, but will also take aquatic invertebrates, spiders and lizards. A few species are mainly insectivorous and have red bills. Typically fish are caught by a dive into the water from a perch, although the kingfisher might hover briefly.[4]

References

  1. Fry (1992) 6–11
  2. Moyle, Robert G. (2006). "A molecular phylogeny of kingfishers (Alcedinidae) with insights into early biogeographic history". Auk. 123 (2): 487–499. doi:10.1642/0004-8038(2006)123[487:AMPOKA]2.0.CO;2.
  3. 1 2 Fry (1992) 64–75
  4. 1 2 Fry (1992) 12–13
  5. 1 2 3 Fry (1992) 195–223
  6. Fry (1992) 21–22
  7. Fry (1992) 17–18

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