Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Greater blue eared starling

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Kingdom
  
Animalia

Genus
  
Lamprotornis

Phylum
  
Chordata

Rank
  
Species

Family
  
Sturnidae

Scientific name
  
Lamprotornis chalybaeus

Higher classification
  
Lamprotornis

Order
  
Passerine

Greater blue-eared starling httpsc1staticflickrcom76168613996985270d5

Similar
  
Lamprotornis, Bird, Starling, Cape starling, Lesser blue‑eared starling

The greater blue-eared starling or greater blue-eared glossy-starling (Lamprotornis chalybaeus) is a bird that breeds from Senegal east to Ethiopia and south through eastern Africa to northeastern South Africa and Angola. It is a very common species of open woodland bird, and undertakes some seasonal migration.

Contents

Greater blue-eared starling The shiny blue starlings an identification guide The Guide39s

Description

Greater blue-eared starling Greater Blueeared Starling Lamprotornis chalybaeus Brufut woods

The greater blue-eared starling is a 22-cm long, short tailed bird. This starling is glossy blue-green with a purple-blue belly and blue ear patch. Its iris is bright yellow or orange. The sexes are similar, but the juvenile is duller and has blackish brown underparts.

Greater blue-eared starling greater blueeared starling or greater blueeared glossystarling

The populations from southern Kenya southwards are smaller than northern birds and are sometimes considered to be a separate subspecies, L. c. sycobius.

Greater blue-eared starling Greater blueeared starling Wikipedia

The lesser blue-eared starling is similar to this species, but the blue of the belly does not extend forward of the legs.

The greater blue-eared starling has a range of musical or grating calls, but the most familiar is a nasal squee-ar.

Breeding

The greater blue-eared starling nests in holes in trees, either natural or excavated by woodpeckers or barbets. It will also nest inside the large stick nests of the sacred ibis or Abdim's stork. A nest will include three to five eggs, which are usually greenish-blue with brown or purple spots, and hatch in 13–14 days. The chicks leave the nest roughly 23 days after hatching.

This species is parasitised by the great spotted cuckoo and occasionally by the greater honeyguide.

Roosting

The greater blue-eared starling is highly gregarious and will form large flocks, often with other starlings. Its roosts, in reedbed, thorn bushes, or acacia, may also be shared.

Feeding

Like other starlings, the greater blue-eared starling is an omnivore, taking a wide range of invertebrates seeds and berries, especially figs, but is diet is mainly insects taken from the ground.

It will perch on livestock, feeding on insects disturbed by the animals and occasionally removing ectoparasites.

References

Greater blue-eared starling Wikipedia