Halcyon
Ruddy Kingfisher (Halcyon coromanda)
The range of this species extends throughout much of southeast Asia, from the foothills of the Himalayas in south-central Nepal and northern India in the west to central and southern Indochina in the east, and south into the Malay Peninsula and Greater Sundas; a disjunct summer breeding population occurs in Japan, the Korean Peninsula and extreme northeast China, wintering in the Philippines and Borneo.
Ten subspecies are currently recognised, as follows:
H. c. major - summer breeding populations occur in Japan, the Korean Peninsula and extreme northeast China, wintering in the Philippines, Borneo and the Talaud Islands.
H. c. coromanda - occurs from south-central Nepal and northeast India in the west to northern Myanmar and south-central China in the east, and throughout Indochina into the Malay Peninsula as far south as the Isthmus of Kra.
H. c. mizorhina - endemic to the Andaman Islands
H. c. minor - occurs from the Isthmus of Kra, south throughout the Malay Peninsula into Sumatra, Borneo and Java, and associated smaller islands.
H. c. bangsi - endemic to the Ryukyu Islands.
H. c. linae - endemic to Palawan
H. c. claudiae - endemic to Tawitawi and Sanga-Sanga in the Sulu Archipelago.
H. c. pelingensis - endemic to the Banggai Islands.
H. c. rufa - endemic to Sulawesi and associated smaller islands
H. c. sulana - endemic to the Sula Islands.
Photograph of a captive individual (
H. c. major) taken at Ueno Zoo, Japan by
@Sicarius :
Photograph of a captive individual (
H. c. minor) taken at Jurong Bird Park, Singapore by
@Jackwow :
Photograph of a captive individual (
H. c. bangsi) taken at Okinawa Zoo & Museum, Japan by
@Sicarius :
Chocolate-backed Kingfisher (Halcyon badia)
The range of this species extends throughout coastal West Africa and the Congo Basin.
Two subspecies are currently recognised, as follows:
H. b. obscuridorsalis - found throughout coastal West Africa, from Sierra Leone in the west to Ghana in the east.
H. b. badia - found throughout the Congo Basin and adjacent regions of central Africa, from southern Nigeria and Cameroon in the west to northeast DRC and western Uganda in the east, and south to northern Angola and southwest DRC.
No photographs of this taxon currently exist in the Zoochat gallery.
White-throated Kingfisher (
Halcyon smyrnensis)
The range of this species extends throughout southern and southeast Asia, from south-central Iraq and the southern coastline of Iran in the west, through the Indian Subcontinent and Sri Lanka, to southern and central Indochina and southeast China in the east, and south from here throughout the Malay Peninsula to Sumatra and western Java; a disjunct population occurs in southern Turkey, the Levant and northeast Egypt.
Five subspecies are currently recognised, as follows:
H. s. smyrnensis - found throughout southern Turkey, the Levant and northeast Egypt, and from south-central Iraq as far east as Pakistan, the extreme northeast of Afghanistan and northwest India.
H. s. fusca - found throughout western Peninsular India and Sri Lanka.
H. s. saturatior - endemic to the Andaman Islands.
H. s. perpulchra - found from eastern Peninsular India, through Bangladesh and northern Myanmar, into Indochina, and south from here to Sumatra and western Java
H. s. fokiensis - found throughout southeast China, Hainan and associated islands.
Photograph of a captive individual (
H. s. smyrnensis) taken at Meir Segals Garden University Zoo, Israel by
@alexkant :
Photograph of a wild individual (
H. s. fusca) taken in Sri Lanka by
@Terry Thomas :
Photograph of a wild individual (
H. s. perpulchra) taken in Van Long Nature Reserve, Vietnam by
@Maguari :
Brown-breasted Kingfisher (Halcyon gularis)
Endemic to the Philippines; absent from Palawan and associated islands in the west.
Monotypic; no photographs of this taxon currently exist in the Zoochat gallery.
Grey-headed Kingfisher (Halcyon leucocephala)
The range of this species extends throughout much of sub-Saharan Africa, from Senegal in the west to Eritrea and Somalia in the east, and south to north-central Namibia, northeast South Africa and southern Mozambique; disjunct populations occur on Cape Verde, and throughout the southwest Arabian Peninsula.
Five subspecies are currently recognised, as follows:
H. l. acteon - endemic to Cape Verde.
H. l. semicaerulea - endemic to the southwest Arabian Peninsula.
H. l. leucocephala - found from Senegal in the west to Eritrea and northwest Somalia in the east, and south to Gabon, northeast DRC and northern Tanzania.
H. l. hyacinthina - found from southeast Ethiopia and southeast Somalia in the north, through the Kenyan coastline to coastal northwest Tanzania.
H. l. pallidiventris - found from northern DRC, west-central Tanzania and Uganda south to northern Namibia and northeast South Africa.
Photograph of a wild individual (
H. l. leucocephala) taken at Lake Manyara National Park, Tanzania by
@Hix
Photograph of a wild individual (
H. l. hyacinthina) taken in the eastern highlands of Ethiopia by
@lintworm
Photograph of a wild individual (
H. l. pallidiventris ) taken at Murchison Falls National Park, Uganda by
@Hix
Capped Kingfisher (
Halcyon pileatus)
The summer breeding range of this species extends throughout central and eastern China, north into the Korean Peninsula, and south into north-central Indochina; the winter breeding range of this species extends patchily and in a highly-fragmented distribution throughout southern and south-east Asia, from the Indian Subcontinent and Sri Lanka in the west to Indochina in the east, and south from here throughout the Malay Peninsula and Greater Sundas.
Monotypic.
Photograph of a captive individual taken at Zoo Berlin, Germany by
@Pedro :
Javan Kingfisher (
Halcyon cyanoventris)
Endemic to Java.
Monotypic.
Photograph of a captive individual taken at Jurong Bird Park, Singapore by
@Pedro :
Woodland Kingfisher (Halcyon senegalensis)
The range of this species extends from Guinea and Sierra Leone in the west to southwest South Sudan, Uganda and western Kenya in the east, and south to northern Angola and southeast Tanzania; summer breeding populations north of this range from Senegal in the west to Eritrea and central Ethiopia in the east, and south of this range from north-central Namibia in the west to northeast South Africa and southernmost Mozambique in the east.
Three subspecies are currently recognised, as follows:
H. s. senegalensis - found from Senegal in the west to Ethiopia and Eritrea in the east, and south from here into western Kenya, northwest Tanzania, Rwanda and Burundi.
H. s. fuscopileus - found throughout coastal West Africa from Sierra Leone to southern Nigeria, and from here throughout the Congo Basin.
H. s. cyanoleuca - found from northern Angola in the west to western Tanzania in the east, and south into northern Namibia, Botswana and northeast South Africa.
Photograph of a wild individual
(H. s. senegalensis) taken at Hawassa, Ethiopia by
@Maguari :
Photograph of a wild individual
(H. s. fuscopileus) taken at Kumasi, Ghana by
@KevinVar :
Mangrove Kingfisher (Halcyon senegaloides)
The range of this species is restricted to a narrow strip of the coastal mangroves and woodlands extending throughout east Africa, from southeast Somalia in the north to east-central South Africa in the south.
Two subspecies are recognised, as follows:
H. s. ranivorus - found from coastal southeast Somalia to Zanzibar and adjacent regions of coastal Tanzania.
H. s. senegaloides - found throughout coastal Mozambique and eastern South Africa.
No photographs of this taxon currently exist in the Zoochat gallery.
Blue-breasted Kingfisher (
Halcyon malimbica)
The range of this species extends patchily and in a highly-fragmented distribution throughout coastal West Africa and the Congo Basin, from Sierra Leone and Guinea in the west to southwest South Sudan and western Uganda in the east, and south to northwest Angola and west-central Tanzania; disjunct populations occur in southwest Ethiopia, east-central Angola, and Senegambia.
Four subspecies are currently recognised as follows
H. m. malimbica - found throughout the Congo Basin, from southern Cameroon to southwest South Sudan, western Uganda and northwest Tanzania, and south to northern and eastern Angola and northwest Zambia.
H. m. torquata - found from Senegal in the west to southwest Mali in the east and south to northern Guinea.
H. m. forbesi - found from Sierra Leone in the west to Nigeria and southwest Cameroon in the east.
H. m. dryas - endemic to Principe and, formerly, Sao Tome.
Photograph of a captive individual (
H. m. malimbica) taken at Philadelphia Zoo, USA by
@Ding Lingwei :
Photograph of a wild individual (
H. m. torquata) taken at Bijilo Monkey Park, The Gambia by
@vogelcommando :
Brown-hooded Kingfisher (
Halcyon albiventris)
The range of this species represents three disjunct populations; on the southeast coastline of Somalia; throughout coastal regions in the west of the Congo Basin and south to southwest Angola; and throughout much of eastern and southeast Africa from southern DRC and northwest Tanzania in the north, south through Malawi, Zambia and Mozambique into eastern and southern South Africa, as far as the Western Cape.
Four subspecies are currently recognised, as follows:
H. a. albiventris - found throughout coastal South Africa from the Western Cape to KwaZulu-Natal.
H. a. vociferans - found from eastern Botswana into northeast South Africa and southern Mozambique, and south from here throughout eastern South Africa to KwaZulu Natal.
H. a. orientalis - found throughout coastal east Africa from southern Somalia to Mozambique in the south, and inland to Malawi, southern Zambia, Zimbabwe and northern Botswana.
H. a. prentissgrayi - found throughout coastal regions of the Congo Basin from Gabon in the north to western Angola in the south, and east from here to southern Kenya in the north to northern Zambia in the south.
Photograph of a captive individual
(unclear subspecific status) taken at Wilhelma, Germany by
@Tomek
Striped Kingfisher (Halcyon chelicuti)
The range of this species extends throughout much of sub-Saharan Africa, from southwest Mauritania in the west to Eritrea in the east, and south to northeast Namibia, southern Botswana and northeast South Africa; only patchily present in the Horn of Africa, and largely absent from coastal West Africa and the Congo Basin.
Two subspecies are currently recognised, as follows:
H. c. chelicuti - found throughout the range of the species, barring the area cited below.
H. c. eremogiton - restricted to a narrow strip of the Sahel, from south-central Mali and northern Nigeria to central Sudan.
Photograph of a wild individual (
H. c. chelicuti) taken at Lake Mburo National Park, Uganda by
@Hix :