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Lifespan, longevity, and ageing

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Maximum longevity: 3.9 years (wild)
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Behavior

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Kingfishers have a specialized vision system for detecting movement. Kingfishers are also able to see a wide angle of view, which helps with watching for prey. They have excellent color vision and can see into the ultraviolet range.

Vocalizations are varied and important for declaring territory and attracting mates, so C. rudis is often heard before it is seen. They are most noisy when performing courtship dances. During dances they will make a repeated “werk……werkwerkwerk” noise. Other calls include anxiety calls, a low pitch “jerp,” and threat calls, a staccato “chikerkerker….”

Communication Channels: visual ; tactile ; acoustic

Other Communication Modes: duets ; choruses

Perception Channels: visual ; ultraviolet; tactile ; acoustic ; chemical

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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Sarah Sirajuddin, Kalamazoo College
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Conservation Status

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Pied kingfishers are not currently threatened. They are rather abundant and are the most common species of kingfisher throughout their range. Although they may benefit from human dams and fish farming, they are at risk of poisoning through bioaccumulation of pollution and toxins in their fish prey.

US Migratory Bird Act: no special status

US Federal List: no special status

CITES: no special status

IUCN Red List of Threatened Species: least concern

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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Benefits

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Pied kingfishers may interfere with fishing operations, including angling, fish stocking, or fish farming.

Negative Impacts: crop pest

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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Benefits

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In Nigeria, pied kingfishers are kept as pets and become tame after one week. They are free to roam with children after that time but some return to the wild. Some pied kingfishers are eaten in this area as well.

Positive Impacts: food

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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Sarah Sirajuddin, Kalamazoo College
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Associations

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Pied kingfishers are major predators of fish. There is some evidence for a mutualistic relationship with clawless otters (Amblonyx).

Mutualist Species:

  • clawless otters (Amblonyx)
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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Sarah Sirajuddin, Kalamazoo College
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Trophic Strategy

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Pied kingfishers primarily eat fish. Unlike other kingfishers, pied kingfishers swallow their fish in flight after plunging. This mode of ingestion makes it difficult to identify species eaten by the kingfisher, but observed prey include Mchenga eucinostomus, Cichlid species, Maylandia xanstomachus, Rastrineobola argentea, Haplochromis species, Barbus species, Gilchristella aestuaria, Ambassis nataalensis, and Hyporhamphus capensis. Pied kingfishers may also take aquatic insects, crustaceans, and ,more rarely, amphibians and mollusks. Adults will regurgitate three to four pellets of undigested bones per day, but hatchlings will digest most of the bones and regurgitate only one pellet per day, absorbing more calcium to support their own bone growth.

There are 3 foraging behaviors displayed by C. rudis: hover-plunge, perch-plunge, and skimming. Hover-plunge occurs when a bird leaves a perch and progressively flies to lower and lower heights until it finally plunges into the water to pierce the prey. Perch-plunge is a tactic in which the bird sits on a perch waiting for a fish to swim close enough so that it can plunge directly into the water after a fish. With this method, a bird will increase its perch height with an increased depth of water. A skimming bird will fly close to the water about 100 m offshore, but little is known about this process because it is difficult to gather data on this hunting method. Still, this method makes pied kingfishers unique because they are the only species of kingfisher that will forage offshore. Pied kingfisher families have been seen to perch together when fishing, but these family units will often split up. Capture success rate is only 9 to 50%. More successful plunges usually take half the time of unsuccessful plunges.

Environmental conditions affect which type of fishing behavior birds use. In windier conditions, C. rudis will use hover-plunge 80% of the time and perch-plunge 20% of the time. In calm conditions, these statistics reverse. Perch availability is also a limiting resource. Pied kingfishers usually implement perch-plunge along a rocky shore or where many perches are available. Hover-Plunge, on the other hand is more common on sandy beaches.

Pied kingfishers can compensate for the refraction index of water by increasing their acceleration and dive angle as the depth of the prey increases. Their nictitating membrane helps to protect their eyes from the water as they enter at high speeds.

Food specialization reduces competition between pied kingfishers and other species. Each species of bird eats a different size fish and larger birds perch on higher spots. This allows many types of fish-eating bird species to exist in the same territory by lowering competition for food resources and perching spots.

Animal Foods: amphibians; fish; insects; mollusks; aquatic crustaceans

Primary Diet: carnivore (Piscivore )

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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Sarah Sirajuddin, Kalamazoo College
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Distribution

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Pied kingfishers (Ceryle rudis) occur in sub-saharan African, the Middle East, the Asia mainland, and southern China. They are common in sub-saharan Africa, along the Nile, and east Egypt. In Pakistan, they are widely distributed across Punjab and the Sind plains. They are rare in Cyprus, Greece, and Poland.

Biogeographic Regions: palearctic (Native ); oriental (Native ); ethiopian (Native )

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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Sarah Sirajuddin, Kalamazoo College
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Habitat

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Pied kingfishers live along streams, lakes, rivers, estuaries, irrigation ditches, canals, bays, floodlands, and reedy inlets. Near mountainous areas, they live in lower river valleys. They usually avoid mangroves and large swamps. The habitat of C. rudis ranges from seashores up to 2,500 m above sea level. They are less abundant near fast flowing waters.

One study shows that there is a distinct difference in habitat use between males and females. Females are more common in rocky shores and are less abundant in beach shorelines which primarily results from breeding patterns. Along rocky shorelines, nests are built closer to the shore. Since females spend more time incubating eggs than males, they have more access to the shore if nest sites are closer to the shoreline.

Range elevation: 0 to 2,500 m.

Habitat Regions: tropical ; terrestrial

Aquatic Biomes: lakes and ponds; rivers and streams; temporary pools; coastal

Wetlands: swamp

Other Habitat Features: riparian ; estuarine

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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Life Expectancy

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Little is known about the lifespan of pied kingfishers, but their mortality increases as a result of human interference. Water pollution or changes in water habitat reduces the number of nesting sites for kingfishers and nestlings can die from flooding of the nest. Also, bioaccumulation of pollution and toxins in fish affects the mortality rates of kingfishers. Kingfishers have relatively high reproduction rates, compensating for increased mortality in some areas.

Average lifespan
Status: captivity:
3.9 years.

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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Morphology

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Ceryle rudis is a medium-sized kingfisher and has the distinctive kingfisher body type, with a large head, small body, small feet, and long, dagger-like bill. They have distinctive black and white coloration, spotted on the wings, and with a black crown on the head.

There are no size differences between male and female birds. The average male is 82.4 g with a bill length of 48.8 mm, and the average female is 86.4 g with a bill length of 48.4 mm. Body mass ranges from 70 to 100 g. Sexes can be distinguished by sexually dimorphic bands across the chest. Males characteristically have two black bands whereas females have only one. The typical body length is 25 to 29 cm, wing length is 13.3 to 14.2 cm, and tail length is 6.6 to 7.4 cm

Young pied kingfishers are similar to adult females, but with the lores, chin, throat, and breast feathers tipped with brown. The bill is shorter and the breast band is greyish black.

Four subspecies of C. rudis have been recognized. These include C. r. rudis, C. r.travancoreensis, C .r. leucoelanura, and C.r.insignis. The geographic range of C. r. rudis consists of sub-saharan Africa, the Nile valley, southern Turkey, and Israel. The geographic range of C. r. travancoreensis is southwest India. These subspecies can be distinguished because C. r. travancoreensis has blacker upper feathers and smaller white spots than C. r. rudis, and its bill can be up to 10 mm longer. Ceryle rudis leucoelanura is similar to C. r. travancoreensis but is smaller and with lighter black spots. It occurs throughout the rest of India, Sri Lanka, northeast Afghanistan, and the Kashmir and Himalayan mountains of India and China. The remaining sub-species, C. r. insignis, is found in Hong Kong, Hainan, and China. It is similar to C. r. leucoelanura but the bill is about 5 mm longer on average.

Pied kingfishers may be confused with crested kingfishers (Megaceryle lugubris), also called greater pied kingfishers. Crested kingfishers, unlike pied kingfishers, have a pink brown lining on the wings instead of a white lining. They are also much larger than pied kingfishers.

Range mass: 70 to 100 g.

Average mass: 84.4 g.

Range length: 25 to 29 cm.

Average length: 25 cm.

Range wingspan: 13.3 to 14.2 cm.

Average wingspan: 14 cm.

Other Physical Features: endothermic ; homoiothermic; bilateral symmetry

Sexual Dimorphism: sexes colored or patterned differently

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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Sarah Sirajuddin, Kalamazoo College
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Associations

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Pied kingfishers are preyed upon by lanner falcons (Falco biarmicus). Both adults and young are preyed on by the cobras (Naja) and mongooses Herpestes. Nestlings are preyed on by safari ants (Dorylus nigricans), snakes, and small, predatory mammals. Defense of the nest involves threat displays such as half raising the wings, fanning the tail, and loud, vigorous vocalizations. Also, entire colonies will attack predators which try to enter nests.

Known Predators:

  • lanner falcons (Falco biarmicus)
  • cobras (Naja)
  • mongooses (Herpestes)
  • safari ants (Dorylus nigricans)
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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Sarah Sirajuddin, Kalamazoo College
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Reproduction

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Courtship involves dancing displays and males offering food to females. Dancing displays are gregarious and done with 3 to 12 males at one time. They noisily call to each other while holding their wings half spread and may also engage in fights by interlocking their beaks or holding their wings. Males attract females by offering food over a period of about three weeks. Pied kingfishers breed cooperatively, with non-mated birds helping raise the offspring of a mated pair. Cooperative breeding begins before eggs hatch, but more males help the breeding pair after hatching.

Mating System: monogamous ; cooperative breeder

Pied kingfishers breed in winter in northern and southern parts of their range and breed in any month near the equator. Pairs are monogamous, and both sexes assist in digging nest holes in soft earth. Pied kingfishers build nests by using their beaks to dig into the ground and their feet to push dirt out of the nest. Nests can be built alone or colonially with up to 100 other birds building nests in the same area. They are built along creeks and rivers and take 23 to 26 days to complete. Colonial nesting is more common in Africa than in India. Eggs are laid at intervals of one day and begin three days after burrow completion. Eggs are glossy, white and round. Incubation takes eighteen days, and a typical clutch contains five eggs. In order to protect the eggs, about 80% of nest holes are actually false starts that do not lead to the egg chamber. Hatchlings will be fed by parents for up to two months after fledging, but will begin diving for food two weeks after fledging. Young kingfishers will grow their flight feathers between eleven and thirteen days after hatching.

Breeding interval: Pied kingfishers breed in all months near the equator. In the northern and southern parts of their range they breed during the late winter.

Breeding season: Breeding occurs from August to November in South Africa. In Egypt breeding occurs from March to May. In Nigeria breeding occurs from November to March. In Zimbabwe breeding occurs from July to November.

Range eggs per season: 1 to 7.

Average eggs per season: 5.

Range time to hatching: 3 to 18 days.

Range fledging age: 11 to 13 days.

Range time to independence: 1 to 3 months.

Key Reproductive Features: iteroparous ; seasonal breeding ; year-round breeding ; gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual ; oviparous

Males and females, along with other males, will share the duties of raising nestlings and incubating eggs. Still, females are the primary incubators during the day and usually incubate at night. Nestlings will be nurtured for 23 to 26 days. Pied kingfishers typically have several male breeder-helpers per nest of two kinds: primary and secondary. Usually there is only one primary helper, most often these are sons of the breeding male. This helper focuses on feeding the nestlings. Secondary helpers are unrelated and show up a few days after the nestlings hatch. They are at first warded away, but eventually are tolerated and focus on feeding the female. Sex ratios in C. rudis are biased, with about 79% males, which promotes this helper behavior.

Before fertilization, male parental investment involves offering food to females in the courtship ritual. This prepares the female to reproduce by providing her with more resources. Throughout fertilization, incubation, fledging, and weaning, males and females will protect the nest from predators with vocalizations and threat behaviors.

Young hatch blind, pink, and helpless. Their eyes open by the ninth day and they begin to grow feathers by the fourth day. Flight feathers begin to grow between the 11th and 13th days, and fully develop six weeks after leaving the nest. Nestlings will leave the nest on the 25th day, and are fed by the parents for 1 to 2 months. They begin diving within 2 weeks of leaving the nest. In caring for their young, pied kingfishers will often feed their nestlings whole fish. They regurgitate one pellet of undigested bones per day.

There is no sanitation at the nest, which becomes covered with liquid feces. To compensate for this, chicks peck at the walls of the nest and cover their droppings with soil.

Parental Investment: altricial ; pre-fertilization (Provisioning, Protecting: Male, Female); pre-hatching/birth (Provisioning: Male, Female, Protecting: Male, Female); pre-weaning/fledging (Provisioning: Male, Female, Protecting: Male, Female); pre-independence (Provisioning: Male, Female, Protecting: Male, Female); post-independence association with parents; extended period of juvenile learning

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Sirajuddin, S. 2006. "Ceryle rudis" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed April 27, 2013 at http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Ceryle_rudis.html
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Status in Egypt

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Resident breeder and winter visitor?

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Pied kingfisher

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The pied kingfisher (Ceryle rudis) is a species of water kingfisher widely distributed across Africa and Asia. Originally described by Carl Linnaeus in 1758, it has five recognised subspecies. Its black and white plumage and crest, as well as its habit of hovering over clear lakes and rivers before diving for fish, make it distinctive. Males have a double band across the breast, while females have a single gorget that is often broken in the middle. They are usually found in pairs or small family groups. When perched, they often bob their head and flick up their tail.

Taxonomy and evolution

The pied kingfisher was one of the many bird species originally described by Linnaeus in the landmark 1758 10th edition of his Systema Naturae, who noted that it lived in Persia and Egypt. He named it Alcedo rudis.[2] The German naturalist Friedrich Boie erected the genus Ceryle in 1828.[3] The name is from classical Greek kērulos, an unidentified and probably mythical bird mentioned by Aristotle and other authors. The specific epithet rudis is Latin for "wild" or "rude".[4]

The pied kingfisher is the only member of the genus Ceryle. Molecular analysis shows it is an early offshoot of the lineage that gave rise to American kingfishers of the genus Chloroceryle.[5] The pied kingfisher was initially believed to be descended from an ancestral American green kingfisher which crossed the Atlantic Ocean about one million years ago.[6] A more recent suggestion is that the pied kingfisher and the American green kingfishers are derived from an Old World species, with the pied kingfisher or its ancestor losing the metallic colouration afterwards.[5]

There are five subspecies:[7]

  • C. r. syriacus Roselaar, 1995 – Turkey to Israel east to southwest Iran (some ornithologists do not recognise this subspecies)[8][9]
  • C. r. rudis (Linnaeus, 1758) – Egypt and Africa south of the Sahara
  • C. r. leucomelanurus Reichenbach, 1851 – east Afghanistan through India to south China and north Indochina
  • C. r. travancoreensis Whistler, 1935 – southwest India[10]
  • C. r. insignis Hartert, 1910 – east and southeast China, Hainan Island

Description

This is a medium-sized kingfisher, about 25 cm (9.8 in) long with a white with a black mask, a white supercilium and black breast bands. The crest is neat and the upperparts are barred in black. Several subspecies are recognized within the broad distribution. The nominate race is found in sub-Saharan Africa, extending into West Asia. The subspecies syriacus is a larger northern bird similar to the nominate subspecies (following Bergmann's rule).[8] Subspecies leucomelanura is found from Afghanistan east into India, Thailand and Southeast Asia. The subspecies travancoreensis of the Western Ghats is darker with the white reduced. The subspecies C. r. insignis is found in Hainan and southeastern China and has a much larger bill. Males have a narrow second breast-band while females have a single broken breast band.[11][12]

Distribution

It is common throughout sub-Saharan Africa and southern Asia from Turkey to India to China. It is resident, and most birds do not migrate, other than short-distance seasonal movements.[13] In India it is distributed mainly on the plains and is replaced in the higher hills of the Himalayas by the crested kingfisher (Megaceryle lugubris).[14]

The pied kingfisher is estimated to be one of the three most numerous kingfishers in the world; the other two are the common kingfisher and collared kingfisher. It is a noisy bird, making it hard to miss.[13]

Behaviour

When perched the pied kingfisher often bobs its heads up and down and will sometimes raise its tail and flick it downwards. It calls often with sharp chirruk chirruk notes.[15] Unlike some kingfishers, it is quite gregarious, and forms large roosts at night.[16]

Feeding

This kingfisher feeds mainly on fish, although it will take crustaceans and large aquatic insects such as dragonfly larvae.[17] It usually hunts by hovering over the water to detect prey, before diving vertically bill-first to capture fish. When not foraging, it has a straight rapid flight and have been observed flying at speeds approaching 50 km/h.[18] In Lake Victoria in East Africa, the introduction of the Nile perch reduced the availability of haplochromine cichlids which were formerly the preferred prey of these birds.[19]

It can consume prey without returning to a perch, often manipulating the subject with its bill and swallowing in flight, and so can hunt over large water bodies or in estuaries that lack perches required by other kingfishers.[20]

Breeding

The breeding season is February to April. Its nest is a hole excavated in a vertical mud bank about five feet above water. The nest tunnel is four to five feet deep and ends in a chamber. Several birds may nest in the same vicinity. The usual clutch is three to six white eggs.[21] The pied kingfisher sometimes reproduces cooperatively, with young non-breeding birds from an earlier brood assisting parents or even unrelated older birds.[22] In India, nestlings have been found to be prone to maggot infestations (probably by Protocalliphora sp.)[23] and in some areas to leeches.[24] Nest holes may sometimes be used for roosting.[15]

In 1947, British zoologist Hugh B. Cott noticed while skinning birds that hornets were attracted to certain birds but avoided the flesh of pied kingfishers. This led to a comparative study of edibility of birds and he suggested that more conspicuously plumaged birds may be less palatable. This suggestion was, however, not supported by a subsequent reanalysis of his data.[25][26]

References

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2017). "Ceryle rudis". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T22683645A110626699. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-1.RLTS.T22683645A110626699.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ Linnaeus, Carl (1758). Systema Naturae per Regna Tria Naturae, Secundum Classes, Ordines, Genera, Species, cum Characteribus, Differentiis, Synonymis, Locis (in Latin). Vol. I (10th revised ed.). Holmiae: (Laurentii Salvii). p. 116 – via The Internet Archive.
  3. ^ Boie, Friedrich (1828). "Bemerkungen über mehrere neu Vogelgattungen". Isis von Oken (in German). 21. Col 316.
  4. ^ Jobling, James A. (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 97, 341. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  5. ^ a b Moyle, Robert G. (2006). "A molecular phylogeny of kingfishers (Alcedinidae) with insights into early biogeographic history" (PDF). Auk. 123 (2): 487–499. doi:10.1642/0004-8038(2006)123[487:AMPOKA]2.0.CO;2. hdl:1808/16596.
  6. ^ Fry, C. H. (1980). "The origin of Afrotropical kingfishers". Ibis. 122 (1): 57–74. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1980.tb00871.x.
  7. ^ Gill, Frank; Donsker, David, eds. (2017). "Rollers, ground rollers & kingfishers". World Bird List Version 7.2. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 17 May 2017.
  8. ^ a b Kasparek, Max (1996). "On the identity of Ceryle rudis syriaca". Journal für Ornithologie. 137 (3): 357–358. doi:10.1007/BF01651075. S2CID 39575753.
  9. ^ Woodall, P. F. (2017). del Hoyo, J.; Elliott, A.; Sargatal, J.; Christie, D. A.; de Juana, E. (eds.). "Pied Kingfisher (Ceryle rudis)". Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive. Lynx Edicions. Retrieved 25 May 2017.
  10. ^ Pittie, A.; Dickinson, E. E. (2010). "Authorship of new names proposed in papers by Whistler & Kinnear, entitled 'The Vernay Scientific Survey of the Eastern Ghats (Ornithological Section)', during 1930–1937" (PDF). Indian Birds. 6 (6): 158–161.
  11. ^ Rasmussen, P. C.; Anderton, J. C. (2005). Birds of South Asia: The Ripley Guide. Vol. 2. Smithsonian Institution & Lynx Edicions. pp. 266–267. ISBN 978-849655385-9.
  12. ^ Peters, J. L. (1955). Check-list of the Birds of the World. Volume 5. Harvard University Press. p. 167.
  13. ^ a b Fry, C. Hilary; Fry, Kathie; Harris, Alan (1992). Kingfishers, Bee-eaters, and Rollers. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 236–240. ISBN 978-0-7136-8028-7.
  14. ^ Hutson, H. P. W. (1931). "The Birds of Hong Kong. Part 6" (PDF). Hong Kong Naturalist. 2 (2): 85–89.
  15. ^ a b Ali, S. & Ripley, S. D. (1983). Handbook of the Birds of India and Pakistan. Vol. 4 (2nd ed.). New Delhi: Oxford University Press. pp. 70–73. ISBN 9780195659375.
  16. ^ Sclater, W. L. (1903). The Birds of South Africa. Vol. 3. London: R.H. Porter. pp. 73–76.
  17. ^ Tjomlid, Steinar A. (1973). "Food preferences and feeding habits of the Pied Kingfisher Ceryle rudis". Ornis Scandinavica. 4 (2): 145–151. doi:10.2307/3676115. JSTOR 3676115.
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Pied kingfisher: Brief Summary

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The pied kingfisher (Ceryle rudis) is a species of water kingfisher widely distributed across Africa and Asia. Originally described by Carl Linnaeus in 1758, it has five recognised subspecies. Its black and white plumage and crest, as well as its habit of hovering over clear lakes and rivers before diving for fish, make it distinctive. Males have a double band across the breast, while females have a single gorget that is often broken in the middle. They are usually found in pairs or small family groups. When perched, they often bob their head and flick up their tail.

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