

242 BIRDS OF ONTARIO. 



SUBORDER ALCYONES. KINGFISHERS, 

 FAMILY ALCEDINID^E. KINGFISHERS. 



GENUS CERYLE BOIE. 



SUBGENUS STREPTOCERYLE BONAPARTE, 



CERYLE ALCYON (LINN.). 



170. Belted Kingfisher. (390) 



Upper parts, broad pectoral bar, and sides under wings, dull blue with tine 

 black shaft lines ; lower eye-lid, spot before eye, a cervical collar and under 

 parts, except as said, pure white ; the ftmaJe with a chestnut belly band, ami 

 the sides of the same color ; quills and tail feathers, black, speckled, blotched 

 and barred with white on the inner- webs ; outer webs of the secondaries and 

 tail feathers, like the back ; wing coverts, frequently sprinkled with white ; 

 bill, black, pale at the base below ; feet, dark. Length, 12 or more ; wing, 

 about 6 ; tail, 3^ ; whole foot, 1 ; bill, about, 2|. 



HAB. North America, south to Panama and the West Indies. 



Nest, none. 



Eggs, six to eight, white, deposited in an enlargement at the end of a 

 tunnel, four to eight feet deep, dug by the bird into a sand bank or gravel pit. 



The Kingfisher is generally distributed throughout Ontario. It 

 arrives early in April, and soon makes its presence known by its 

 loud, rattling cry, as it dashes along and perches on a horizontal 

 bough overhanging the river. On some such point of observation it 

 usually waits and watches for its scaly prey, but when passing over 

 open water of greater extent, it is often observed to check its course, 

 hover hawk-like at some distance above the surface, and then dash 

 into the water after the manner of a Tern. If a fish be secured, it is 

 carried in the bill to some convenient perch, on which it is hammered 

 till dead, and then swallowed head downwards. 



The Kingfisher is a strong flier, arid is sometimes seen careering at 

 a considerable height, as if for exercise. 



Although many of them breed throughout Ontario, numbers pro- 

 ceed much farther north. In Manitoba and the North- West they 

 occur in all suitable places, and in Alaska they are found along the 

 entire course of the Yukon River, reaching the shores of Behring 

 Sea. They have also been taken at Sitka, and frequent all the clear 

 streams of the interior, nesting as they do elsewhere, in a deep 

 burrow in a bank dug out by themselves. 



They are not sensitive to cold, for in open seasons I have seen 

 them remaining till January, but when the frost forces the fish to* 

 retire to deep water, the Kingfisher's supply of food is cut off, and 

 he has to move to the south. 



