Brown-hooded Kingfisher (Halcyon albiventris)Other namesAfrikaans: Bruinkopvisvanger
Dutch: bruinkapijsvogel
German: Braunkopfliest
French: Martin-chasseur à tête brune
Portuguese: Pica-peixe-de-barrete-castanho
Scientific ClassificationOrder: Coraciiformes
Family: Dacelonidae
Genus: Halcyon
This is a small kingfisher, approximately the same size as the
Woodland Kingfisher and Mangrove Kingfisher (22-24cm), but less striking than other kingfishers. Has a dull red bill and legs, dark brown-streaked head, white throat, lower back and rump bright blue, buff and white underparts and a black mantle.
Its loud descending
KIK-KIK-KIK-kik-kik call often betrays its presence well before it is seen.
Distribution: Found in the eastern parts of Southern Africa, with small populations in Namibia and Okavang Delta. Absent from arid interior and most of highveld.
Habitat: Usually associated with water and cover. Dense woodland, riverine woodland and thicket, bush, scrub, edges of evergreen forest and plantations, wooded grassland, degraded areas with some remaining trees, edges of subsistence cultivation, large gardens and parks in built up areas. Absent from Kalahari sand formations.
General Habits: Solitary or in pairs. After breeding, family roosts together for a few weeks. Spends much time perched quietly on branch or wire, exposed or in shade, always alert for prey. Bathes by making numerous dives into water, from low perch, shaking off after each dip. Sunbathes by lying sideways on branch, with wings and tail spread, head turned sideways, mantle feathers fluffed and raised. Pair roosts at night in self-excavated tunnel in earth bank.
Foraging & Food: Flies down fast to seize prey from ground, tree trunk or water, briefly alighting or, more commonly, seizing item without alighting, and returning to perch. Diet includes locusts, grasshoppers, crickets, mantids, cockroaches, beetles, caterpillars, scorpions, tadpoles, millipedes, amphibians, geckos, chameleons, skinks and other lizards up to 60% its own length and snakes up to 230mm. Also eats fish (50mm) including goldfish, crabs and small rodents. Eats young birds and adult passerines, including cisticolas, prinias, waxbills and Southern Double-collared Subird. Large items are battered against tree trunk, then swallowed head first; always carried to young head forward in bill. Rarely seen fishing, sometimes without success, but can be proficient.
Breeding: Monogamous, solitary nester and territorial. Aggressive in defense of territory, chasing rollers, small tree snakes and some lizards. Male sings while perched upright, wings held slightly out, down and vibrating.
Wing-vibrating display also performed by pair facing each other, each head held high, singing continuously, periodically spreading wings wide in vertical plane, with tail fanned and occasionally raised, at the same time pivoting and bobbing.
Nest: Excavated by both sexes. Straight or bending, roughly horizontal tunnel in stream bank or erosion gully, clear or overhung with woody growth.
Laying dates: Sept-Dec and as late as Apr in KwaZulu-Natal.
Status: Common resident.
Conservation: Not threatened. Widespread, common and adaptable. In recent years, range has expanded in W. Cape and into southern Karoo, probably due to spread of trees in parks and gardens.
Source: Roberts VII