 CORACIIFORMES
CORACIIFORMES| Japan 1993 | Uganda 1991 | Singapore 2011 | Australia 1980 | Japan 1993 | 
|  |  |  |  |  | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Common Kingfisher Alcedo atthis (Alcedinidae) | Malachite Kingfisher Alcedo cristata (Alcedinidae) | White-Collared Kingfisher Todirhamphus chloris (Alcedinidae) | Paradise Kingfisher Tanysiptera sylvia (Alcedinidae) | Crested Kingfisher Megaceryle lugubris (Alcedinidae) | 
| Japan 1992 | Australia 1999 | Australia 1993 | 
|  |  |  | 
|---|---|---|
| Ruddy Kingfisher Halcyon coromanda (Alcedinidae) | Sacred Kingfisher Halcyon sancta (Alcedinidae) | Blue-winged Kookaburra Dacelo leachii (Alcedinidae) | 
| Mali 1965 | Australia 1980 | Honduras 1987 | Nicaragua 1981 | 
|  |  |  |  | 
|---|---|---|---|
| Abyssinian Ground-hornbill Bucorvus abyssinicus (Bucorvidae) | Rainbow Bee-eater Merops ornatus (Meropidae) | Turquoise-browed Motmot Eumomota superciliosa (Motmotidae) | Blue-crowned Motmot Momotus momota (Motmotidae) | 
|  |  |  |  |  | 
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Common Kingfisher Alcedo atthis (Alcedinidae) (CORACIIFORMES) | Crested Kingfisher Megaceryle lugubris (Alcedinidae) (CORACIIFORMES) | Laughing Kookaburra Dacelo novaeguineae (Alcedinidae) (CORACIIFORMES) | Ruddy Kingfisher Halcyon coromanda (Alcedinidae) (CORACIIFORMES) | Great Hornbill Buceros bicornis (Bucorvidae) (CORACIIFORMES) | 
Kingfisher lives mainly in a waterside. The bill is straight and remains still in a stake and a branch keenly and it makes nose dive when it find the fish swimming on the surface of the water and arrest, and there is a habit to come back to the again original branch.
The ruddy kingfisher is generally large size and lives in the forest and eats a frog, a lizard, a fresh water crab, land products shellfish. It is blue-winged kookaburra of the Australian product to be famous for this friend. With size of a small crow, a cry resembles the human laughter with a brown spotted quiet bird. Because it calls in a big voice in forest late in the daybreak and the evening, it is said when it is as a substitute for a thing of a clock for the Bushman of the Australian aborigine.
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