Abstract
The breeding ecology of the Mangrove Kingfisher Halcyon senegaloides (family Alcedinidae) remains poorly known. While the few nests recorded in southern and East Africa have been in tree hollows, a seasonal population in central Mozambique woodland breeds in cavities in arboreal termitaria. Despite this breeding strategy being widely recorded in many tropical kingfisher species, it has received little research attention in the Afrotropical realm. We report on the siting and structural characteristics of arboreal termitaria used as nesting sites by Mangrove Kingfishers in central Mozambique and document the thermal dynamics of a nesting cavity in an arboreal termitarium. Arboreal termitaria (average volume 40.1 ± 23.8 l) occurred at a density of 0.52 ± 0.22 termitaria ha−1 in large trees or shrubs, mostly of the families Fabaceae and Malvaceae. Termitaria containing nest cavities were situated 10.8 ± 3.1 m above the ground, and most nests (78.6%) faced north. Nest cavity temperatures averaged 31.4 ± 2.6 °C, which is warmer and more stable than the average ambient temperatures of 28.7 ± 4.0 °C. ‘Carton’ termitaria (comprising a mixture of faecal matter and wood fragments) are thus believed to confer a thermal advantage for summer-nesting Mangrove Kingfishers.
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