Green Kingfisher: Small kingfisher with dark green head, back, and wings, white chin and collar, rufous breast band, and white belly with black spots. Female lacks breast band.
Green Kingfisher: Uncommon and local in southern Texas; rare to casual in southeastern Arizona; has recently begun nesting locally in south Arizona, spreading north from Mexico. Preferred habitats include small, clear streams, quiet pools, and backwaters.
"tick-tick", "cheep"
The Green Kingfisher was first described in 1788 by Johann Friedrich Gmelin, a German naturalist, botanist and entomologist.
They are smaller than other kingfishers and lack blue-gray coloration.
A group of green kingfishers are collectively known as a "clique" and a "concentration" of kingfishers.
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Family
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Species
Chloroceryle americana
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Length7.5 - 8.75
Inches
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Wingspan12
Inches
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Green Kingfisher: Small kingfisher, dark green head, back, and wings, white chin, collar, rufous breast band, white belly with black spots. Black bill is long and straight. Legs and feet are gray. Feeds mostly on small fish taken in dives and aquatic insects, amphibians. Direct flight.
● Song: "tick-tick", "cheep"
● Foraging & Feeding: Green Kingfisher: Hunts from low perches along the edge of the water or from rocks in the water. Feeds primarily on small fish, insects, and amphibians taken by plunge diving.
● Breeding & nesting: Green Kingfisher: Three to six white eggs are laid in a nest made of grass and built in a burrow 2 to 3 feet deep, usually in a stream bank. Incubation ranges from 19 to 21 days and is carried out by both parents.
● Similar species: Green Kingfisher: Belted and Ringed kingfishers are larger with blue-gray upperparts and head.
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BreedingMonogamous, Solitary nester
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PopulationUncommon and local in southern Texas, Rare to casual in southeastern Arizona
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MigrationNonmigratory
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Weight1.3
Ounces
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