Ruddy Kingfisher eats one-legged crab

Posted by BESG on 23 September 09, Wednesday
Contributed by Daisy O'Neill

By tradition, kingfishers are placed in a huge single family, pronged by three sub-families belonging to the Halcyonidae (Wood Kingfishers), Alcedinidae (Small Kingfishers) and Cerylidae (Pied & Green Kingfishers). Let’s take a look at one of the Wood Kingfishers- Ruddy Kingfisher (Halcyon coromanda) found perched in stoic pose with a large crab wedged in by a dagger like, oversized red beak in a forested mangrove river edge (below left).

Let’s hide behind a tree trunk and observe through a 82mm diameter digiscope, observe how this colourful, feathered, plump bodied bird coped with such a huge catch; at close range, admire its dark, brown eyes stud in an oversized head and short, bright red legs gripping a horizontal branch with its 3 joined, forwarded toes for counter balance.

Ruddy Kingfishers are strongly territorial and their diet is known to consist of worms, insects, small lizards including crustacean, small mammals and even young birds.

Admire too, Ruddy’s plumage of rufous undercarriage, overshadowed by violet-magenta uppers setting this species contrastingly apart from other species. In flight, it coyly flashes a light blue feathered rump like a marathon lighted torch on a flying sprinter, chasing after its own repeated loud, staccato, shrill noted calls of the bird (above right).

This extremely shy bird sensed my presence and refused to concede to relish the crustacean. And so, a waiting game began where it continued to perch motionless with crab in beak.

I remained hunched over my digiscope and waited for some action from the bird.

As time ticked by, my head began screaming to levitate away from my neck that died stiff of the waiting game. I surrendered.

Ruddy finally relented when thought I wasn’t looking and began the process of dismembering the remaining foot of the equally screaming crustacean.

‘Ouch!! ..do you mind? What do you think you are dooooing?

Ruddy playing selective deafness, repeatedly whacked the crab on the tree branch, leaving a tenderized body and a pair of black unforgiving eyes star-gazing into the menacing eyeballs of Ruddy that repeatedly said, “I gonna eat ya!, I gonna eat ya!”

This was followed by vigorous tossing and repositioning of the crab in its beak for best swallowing position before Ruddy Kingfisher took the crustacean whole, chased down by one mighty gulp into the bird’s belly. Attach blurry action images too fast for my camera to handle and shows Ruddy’s bulging belly (above).

Ruddy was seen on earlier visits with a mate. Otherwise, sighting of this quality species would be uncommon and when encountered, would usually be seen quietly perched and alone.

It was my first encounter with a raucous, breeding pair that appeared to be thoroughly enjoying the freedom of romance play-flying, ‘catch me if you can’ through the mangrove forested river edge.

Join me next in the red-iron bird to venture beyond shores, see through Avian Writer’s eyes, be transported in spirit, be entertained and be fascinated by other unusual species of endemic Kingfishers and the wild.

Let’s do that…. before they all disappear in the wilderness of concrete jungles.

AVIAN WRITER DAISY O’NEILL PENANG MALAYSIA
© Ruddy Kingfisher Eats One-legged Crab


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    Categories: Feeding-invertebrates, Kingfishers, Writer-Avian

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