Puneet Varma (Editor)

Rainbow bee eater

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Coraciiformes

Genus
  
Merops

Higher classification
  
Merops

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Meropidae

Scientific name
  
Merops ornatus

Rank
  
Species

Rainbow bee-eater Rainbow Beeeater BirdLife Australia

Similar
  
Bird, Bee‑eater, Merops, Sacred kingfisher, Black‑faced cuckooshrike

Rainbow bee eaters feasting on bees august 2011 wmv


The rainbow bee-eater (Merops ornatus) is a near passerine bird in the bee-eater family Meropidae. It is the only species of Meropidae found in Australia.

Contents

Rainbow bee-eater Rainbow Beeeater Merops ornatus Wildiaries

Rainbow bee eater


Description

Rainbow bee-eater httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsdd

Rainbow bee-eaters are brilliantly colored birds that grow to be 19–24 cm (max 28 cm) in length, including the elongated tail feathers. The upper back and wings are green in color, and the lower back and under-tail coverts are bright blue. The undersides of the wings and primary flight feathers are red and tipped with black, and the tail is black to deep violet. The rainbow bee-eater's two central tail feathers are longer than the other tail feathers, and are longer in the male rainbow bee-eaters than in the females. The crown of the head, the stomach and breast, and the throat are pale yellowish in color, and the rainbow bee-eater has a black bib and a black stripe through its red eye.

Distribution and habitat

Rainbow bee-eater Rainbow beeeater

Rainbow bee-eaters are a common species and can be found during the summer in forested areas in most of southern Australia excluding Tasmania. They migrate north during the winter into northern Australia, New Guinea, and some of the southern islands of Indonesia.

Rainbow bee-eater Rainbow Beeeaters

They may be found in open woodlands, beaches, dunes, cliffs, mangroves, woodlands and they often visits parks and private gardens.

Behaviour

Rainbow bee-eater Rainbow Beeeater Australian Birds photographs by Graeme Chapman

Like all bee-eaters, rainbow bee-eaters are very social birds. When they are not breeding they roost together in large groups in dense undergrowth or large trees.

===Nesting===Rainbow bee-eaters are ground nesting birds, like all bee-eaters.Breeding season is before and after the rainy season in the north, and from November to January in the south. Rainbow bee-eaters are believed to mate for life. The male will bring the female insects while she digs the burrow that will be their nest. The bee-eater digs its burrow by balancing on its wings and feet, and digs with its bill, then pushing loose soil backwards with its feet while balancing on its bill. The female bee-eater can dig about three inches down every day. The nest tunnel is very narrow, and the birds' bodies press so tightly against the tunnel walls that when the birds enter and exit their movement acts like a piston, pumping in fresh air and pushing out stale air. Rainbow bee-eaters have also been known to share their nest tunnels with other bee-eaters and sometimes even other species of birds. The female lays between 3 and 7 glossy white eggs, which are incubated for about 24 days until hatching. The young bee-eaters fledge after about 30 days and are fed by both parents, as well as any older bee-eaters that may not have paired off or have lost their mate. Cane toads are known to prey on nestlings.

Diet

Rainbow bee-eaters mostly eat flying insects, but, as their name implies, they have a real taste for bees. Rainbow bee-eaters are always watching for flying insects, and can spot a potential meal up to 45 metres away. Once it spots an insect a bee-eater will swoop down from its perch and catch it in its long, slender, black bill and fly back to its perch. Bee-eaters will then knock their prey against their perch to subdue it. Even though rainbow bee-eaters are actually immune to the stings of bees and wasps, upon capturing a bee they will rub the insect's stinger against their perch to remove it, closing their eyes to avoid being squirted with poison from the ruptured poison sac. Bee-eaters can eat several hundred bees a day, so they are obviously resented by beekeepers, but their damage is generally balanced by their role in keeping pest insects such as locusts and hornets under control.

Roe 8 Controversy

Opponents of the Roe 8 project in Perth, Western Australia suggest that the Rainbow bee-eater migrates to the Beeliar wetlands, which is in the pathway of the Roe Highway extension.

References

Rainbow bee-eater Wikipedia