Kookaburra
These members of the kingfisher family are only found in Australia and New Guinea.
Class: Aves
Order: Coraciformes
Family: Alcedinidae
Genus: Dacelo
Species: 5 species
Common Names: Kookaburra, Australian Kingfisher
Kookaburras are meat-eaters, feeding on small rodents, snakes and other reptiles, insects, and other small birds. Unlike most other kingfisher species, they rarely eat fish.
The unique call of the kookaburra is used to let other kookaburra’s know where their territories are. These territorial birds live in family groups, and often the calls will be started by one bird and picked up by others in the group, forming a chorus.
The laughing kookaburra usually lays three eggs per clutch. The eggs are incubated for a little less than a month, and young will leave the nest around 40 days after hatching.
Kookaburras are members of the kingfisher family of birds. They measure between 11 and 19 inches long, and can weigh as much as 11 ounces, though some heavier examples of laughing kookaburra can weigh over one pound (16 ounces).
Like all kingfishers, kookaburras are compact, large-headed birds with long pointed bills. The most well-known kookaburra species is the laughing kookaburra, named for its distinctive call that sounds like human laughter.
The laughing kookaburra’s famous cry has been used as a “stock sound” in numerous films and television programs to establish a “jungle” atmosphere. Despite these animals only being native to Australia, their calls are used as background sounds for shows and movies set in Africa, Asia, and South America.
A kookaburra named Olly was one of the mascots of the 2000 Summer Olympics held in Sydney, Australia.
The kookaburra is the subject of a popular children’s song written in 1932, called “Kookaburra (sits in the old gum tree)”.
All kookaburras are species of Least Concern and are protected within Australia.