Halcyon (genus)
Halcyon is a genus of the tree kingfishers, near passerine birds in the subfamily Halcyoninae.
Taxonymy
The genus Halcyon was introduced by the English naturalist and artist William John Swainson in 1821. He named the type species as the woodland kingfisher."Halcyon" is a name for a bird in Greek legend generally associated with the kingfisher. There was an ancient belief that the bird nested on the sea, which it calmed in order to lay its eggs on a floating nest. Two weeks of calm weather were therefore expected around the winter solstice. This myth leads to the use of halcyon as a term for peace or calmness.
The genus contains 11 species:
Image | Scientific name | Common Name | Distribution |
Halcyon coromanda | Ruddy kingfisher | east and southeast Asia. | |
Halcyon smyrnensis | White-throated kingfisher | from the Sinai east through the Indian subcontinent to the Philippines. | |
Halcyon cyanoventris | Javan kingfisher | Java and Bali | |
Halcyon badia | Chocolate-backed kingfisher | western Sub-Saharan Africa. | |
Halcyon pileata | Black-capped kingfisher | India east to China, Korea and Southeast Asia | |
Halcyon leucocephala | Grey-headed kingfisher | Cape Verde Islands off the north-west coast of Africa to Mauritania, Senegal and Gambia, east to Ethiopia, Somalia and southern Arabia and south to South Africa. | |
Halcyon albiventris | Brown-hooded kingfisher | Sub-Saharan Africa | |
Halcyon chelicuti | Striped kingfisher | Sub-Saharan Africa | |
Halcyon malimbica | Blue-breasted kingfisher | Equatorial Africa | |
Halcyon senegalensis | Woodland kingfisher | Africa south of the Sahara. | |
Halcyon senegaloides | Mangrove kingfisher | Somalia, south through Kenya, Tanzania and Mozambique, to South Africa |