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The Rollers

The article describes the species of the three roller families: the true rollers of family Coraciidae, the ground-rollers of family Brachypteraciidae, and the cuckcoo-roller which is the sole member of family Leptosomidae. The first two families belong to the Coraciiformes order. The cuckoo-roller family was previously in the Coraciiformes order, but has been recently placed in its own order Leptosomiformes.

The ground-rollers are found primarily on the ground and that is where they capture their prey. The true rollers spot their prey, which are mainly insects, while they are perched in trees. They belong to two genera. Those in Eurystomus usually catch their prey on the wing while those in Coracias usually fly to the ground to catch them. Species of both genera are colorful birds. The rollers of genus Coracias brings to mind kingfishers which are also colorful and fly from tree perches to get their prey; but instead of getting their prey on the ground, kingfishers continue on their trajectory and catch their prey underwater!

The true rollers of family Coraciidae and the ground-rollers of family Brachypteraciidae belong to the Coraciiformes order, as do the bee-eaters of family Meropidae, the kingfishers of family Alcedinidae, the Motmots of family Momotidae, and the todies of family Todidae.




Ground-Rollers

Order Coraciiformes    Family Brachypteraciidae

All five of the ground-roller species are only found on Madagascar. In fact, no fossils have been found to indicate ground-rollers were ever found elsewhere. Except for one species, their favorite foods are ants, grasshoppers, beetles, caterpillars, centipedes and similar invertebrates. The scaly ground-roller's main food is worms. The diet of the ground-rollers is similar to that of the true rollers of family Coraciidae, but unlike those more aerial species, the ground-rollers stalk their prey on the ground. This is reflected in their longer legs and shorter, more rounded wings.



Image by David Cook


Because ground-rollers are rarely seen flying or perched in trees, they are difficult to photograpy or observe. As a result, there are uncertainties about the size of some of their populations and whether they are declining or stable. But the expanding human population in Madagascar has lead to substantial loss of forests and has stressed most of the ground-roller populations. Of the five species, one is listed as Threatened and three as Vulnerable.

The ground-rollers are approximately the same size as the true rollers of family Coraciidae. The smallest species is the rufous-headed ground-roller which has a length of 24 to 27 cm and weight of 73 to 85 grams which is smaller than any of the true rollers. The short-tailed ground-roller is 30 to 38 cm long and weighs 180 to 220 grams which is about the same as the largest true roller.

Like most of the Coraciiformes, ground-rollers are cavity nesters. In this case, the cavities are tunnels that the the ground-rollers excavate in the ground. A rare exception may nest in a tree cavity. The tunnels are created by both partners using their bill and feet. A sandy site with no nearby vegetation is preferred for ease of excavation. The tunnels vary from ,3 to 1.2 meters, the variation due to the species, soil condition, and individual preference. The end of the tunnel is enlarged and may be lined with dry vegetation.


Genus Atelornis
These ground-rollers eat mainly ants, beetles, cockroaches, and beetles which are found on the littered forest floor. They are quite small with a length under 30 cm and weight under 115 grams. These Atelornis ground-rollers are endemic to Madagascar.

Roller,_Pitta-like Ground-  Atelornis pittoides 
Description: The pitta-like ground roller has bronzy-green upperparts, a white belly, and buff flanks. The breast and back have a rufous band.  The head is cobalt blue and there is a black mask. It has a white supercilium and throat which is bordered in blue. The pitta-like ground-roller is small and slender with a length of 25 to 29 cm and a weight of 74 to 114 grams. It has 2 to 4 white eggs.

Range: Madagascar.

Habitat: Forests with deep leaf litter and a good amount of dead wood.

Diet: Insects such as ants, beetles, and cockroaches. Also worms and frogs. Forages on the ground by actively searching for prey or standing still and waiting for one to show itself; it then runs and jumps after the prey.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) Winkelbohrer  2) Frank Vassen - Madagascar  3) Dick Daniels - Ranomafana, Madagascar 4) Attis_1979



Roller,_Rufous-headed Ground-  Atelornis crossleyi 
Description: The rufous-headed ground-roller has olive-green upperparts. The head and breast are rufous-brown with the belly becoming lighter buff. It has a narrow blackish collar with white vertical streaks. This ground-roller has a slender black bill, brown eyes, and dark legs. It is the smallest ground-roller with a length of 24 to 27 cm and weight of 73 to 85 grams.

Range: Madagascar.

Habitat: Lowland or high country rainforests which have large trees plus dense thickets, leaf litter, and rotten logs.

Diet: Insects such as ants, beetles, and cockroaches. Also millipedes, moths, snails, bees.

Conservation status: It is listed as Near Threatened due to habitat destruction caused by slash-and-burn agriculture.
Image by: 1) Skip_Russell  2) David Cook  3) Charles_J_Sharp




Genus Brachypteracias

Roller,_Scaly Ground-  Brachypteracias squamiger 
Description: The scaly ground-roller has mainly copper-green upperparts with a rufous hind-collar. The upperparts have some white fringing producing a scale-like appearance. The underparts plus head have a black and white scaly appearance. It has a grey bill and pink legs. This ground-roller is 27 to 31 cm long and weighs 135 to 165 grams.

Range:  Madagascar.

Habitat: Lowland or medium-high country rainforests which have large trees plus dense thickets, leaf litter, and rotten logs.

Diet: Mainly worms. Also ants, beetles, crickets, caterpillars, centipedes.

Conservation status: The scaly ground-roller is listed as Vulnerable because of its restricted range which is being rapidly cleared.
Image by: 1) Boyd Horsbrugh   2) Skip_Russell



Roller,_Short-legged Ground-  Brachypteracias leptosomus 
Description: The short-legged ground-roller has bronzy-green upperparts and hind-crown. The face is maroon-brown with small white spots. It has a brown and buff throat with some streaks. It has a white breast-band and supercilium. The rest of underparts are pale with brown bars. This ground-roller is 30 to 38 cm long and weighs 180 to 220 grams.

Range: Madagascar.

Habitat: Lowland or medium-high country rainforests which has large trees plus dense thickets, leaf litter and rotten logs.

Diet: Ants, grasshoppers, beetles, caterpillars, centipedes. Also snails, worms.

Conservation status: The short-legged ground-roller is listed as Vulnerable because of habitat destruction.
Image by: 1, 2) Frank Vassen - Madagascar  3) Francesco_Veronesi




Genus Uratelornis - 1 species

Roller,_Long-tailed Ground-   Uratelornis chimaera 
Description: The long-tailed ground-roller has a very long tail, brown upperparts with dark streaks, and light grey underparts. The white throat has a black border. There is a white stripe at the base of the bill. The wings and tail have a blue edge. It is 34 to 47 cm long, but that includes the long tail.

Range: near coast of southwest Madagascar.

Habitat: Dry deciduous forests.

Diet: Cockroaches, ants, beetles, caterpillars, grasshoppers, worms. It searches for prey on the ground even by overturning leaf litter.

Conservation status: The long-tailed ground-roller is listed as Vulnerable because of ongoing habitat destruction and a decline in the quality of the remaining habitat.
Image by: 1, 2) Frank Vassen   3) Gerry_Zambonini






True Rollers

Order Coraciiformes    Family Coraciidae


These rollers get their name from the aerial acrobatics some of these birds perform during courtship or territorial flights. They reside in warm climates of the Old World including Australasia. Many of the rollers are colorful birds with blues, pinks, and / or cinnamon browns predominating. The legs are short and they have the two inner front toes connected. They have short necks, long wings, the bill is slightly hooked. Rollers are mainly insect eaters. Some take their prey on the wing while others swoop from a perch down to the ground to grab their prey. The lay 2 to 6 white eggs, incubate for 17 to 20 days, and fledge in about 30 days.



Image by Andy Morffew



Like most of the Coraciiformes, true rollers are cavity nesters. Instead of excavatiinga tunnel as the ground-rollers do, they instead use existing cavities for their nest. Their first choice is a cavity in a tree, usually dead. The also nest under eaves, in concrete hollows, cavities in cliffs, and some will actually choose to nest in a termite mound cavity.

Genus Coracias
Of the eight species in Coracias, six are found in Africa. They are colorful with blues and browns predominating. Prey included locusts, grasshoppers, beetles, reptiles, and small rodents. They mainly seek prey from perches and capture them on the ground.

Roller,_Abyssinian  Coracias abyssinicus  
Description: The Abyssinian roller has mainly blue plumage, a lighter head with dark eye-line, and a brown back. It is 28 to 30 cm long and weighs 99 to 140 grams. This length does not include its tail streamers. It nests in a hole in a tree or building and lays 3 to 6 eggs.

Range: Central Africa.

Habitat: Warm open country with some trees. It has also adapted to farmland and human habitation.

Diet: Large insects, small rodents. Mainly hunts from a perch for prey are on the ground.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) JV Verde - Gambia  2) Frans_Vandewalle - Gambia  3) Henk_Veldkamp   4) Francesco_Veronesi - Gambia  



Roller,_Blue-bellied   Coracias cyanogaster 
Description: The blue-bellied roller has a dark green back. The head, neck, and breast are white while the remainder of the bird is blue. It is 28 to 30 cm long and weighs 110 to 180 grams with the male slightly larger than the female. Its length does not inlcude its tail streamers.

Range: Central Africa.

Habitat: Warm open country with some trees.

Diet: Large insects, worms, small snakes. Mainly hunts from a perch for prey on the ground.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) Charlie Westerinen - Reid Zoo, Tuscon, Arizona  2) Sandy Cole - National Aviary  3) Dick - National Aviary  4) gisela_braun



Roller,_European  Coracias garrulus 
Description: The European roller has mainly blue plumage. It has an orange-brown back, a black eye-line, and does not have tail streamers. It has a strong direct flight, with the brilliant blue contrasting with black flight feathers. It is 29 to 32 inches long and weighs 120 to 160 grams. The European roller has a striking blue breast while the similar Indian roller has a brown breast.

Range: Summers in Europe, Asia, northern Africa. Winters in Sub-Saharan Africa.

Habitat: Open woodlands, grassy areas with trees and or shrubs. Mainly hunts from a perch for prey which are on the ground; also takes some prey on the wing.

Diet: Mainly beetles and other hard-bodied insects; also grasshoppers, termites, centipedes.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) Arno Meintjes  2) Christian Svane   3) Andy_Li  4) Andy_Morffew 



Roller,_Indian  Coracias benghalensis 
Description: The Indian roller has a brownish breast (can tend to blue in a subspecies), and a blue crown and vent. It has a purplish throat and neck with white streaks. It does not have tail streamers. The Indian roller has 3 to 5 eggs, incubates 17 to 19 days, and fledges 30 to 35 days. It is 30 to 34 cm in length and weighs 166 to 176 grams. The similar European roller has a striking blue breast, while the Indian roller usually hasa brown breast.

Range: Asia - mainly Indian Subcontinent.

Habitat: Widespread (grassland, plantations, parks, open woods).

Diet: Insects (especially grasshoppers), reptiles, small mammals, Mainly hunts from a perch for prey which are on the ground; sometimes hovers over prey before attacking.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) JJ Harrison - Thailand  2) Lip Kee - India  3) JM Garg - India  4) Koshy Koshy
1) Indochinese Roller  C. b. affinis



Roller,_Lilac-breasted Coracias caudatus
Description: The lilac-breasted roller has a violet breast, rump and much of the wings. It has a brown back, green head, white chin, and greenish-yellow legs. It is 28 to 30 cm long and weights 85 to 135 grams. Its length does not include its tail streamers.

Range: Eastern and southern Africa.

Habitat: Open savannah habitats with scattered trees and shrubs.

Diet: Insects, spiders, reptiles. Mainly hunts from a perch for prey which are on the ground.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) Adam_John_Bourke - Kenya  2) Dick Daniels - Tanzania  3) Yoky - Tanzania  4) Lip Kee - Botswana
6) Juvenile  



Roller,_Purple-winged Coracias temminckii 
Description: The purple-winged roller has mainly dark purple plumage. The crown and upper-tail coverts are pale blue, the back dark olive, and the bill is black. It is 30 to 34 cm long and weighs 145 to 165 grams. There are no tail streamers.

Range:  Sulawesi (Indonesia).

Habitat: Forests, wooded savana. scrubland.

Diet: Locusts, grasshoppers, beetles, lizards. Mainly hunts from a perch for prey which are on the ground.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) John Gerrard Keulemans  2) Lip Kee 



Roller,_Racket-tailed  Coracias spatulatus  Found: Africa
Description: The racket-tailed roller is named for  the paddle-like tips to its elongated tail. It has a rufous back, white forehead and supercilia, green crown, and blue tail. It has pale blue underparts with white streaks, a black bill, and pale yellow eyes.The racket-tailed roller is 28 to 30 cm long and weighs 88 to 111 grams. It has 2 to 4 eggs,

Range: Southern Africa, but not including South Africa.

Habitat: Woodlands, treed savana.

Diet: Grasshoppers, beetles, insect larvae, scorpions and small lizards. Hunts from a perch for prey on the ground.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) Valerie  2) Adam_Dewan  3) Nik_Borrow - Zambia  4)  Arthur_Chapman - Namibia



Roller,_Rufous-crowned   Coracias naevius
Description: The rufous-crowned roller, also known as the purple roller, has a rufous crown, chestnut wings, white supercilium, dark eye-line, and pink underparts with white streaks. It is 35 to 40 cm long and weights 125 to 200 grams.

Range: Central and southern Africa.

Habitat: Opne woodlands and treed savana.

Diet: Locusts, grasshoppers, beetles, ants, reptiles, rodents. Hunts from a perch for prey which are on the ground.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) Frank Vassen   2) Yoky - Tanzania  3)  Renier Maritz - South Africa  4) Bernard_Dupont - South Africa




Genus Eurystomus
The Eurystomus vary from the other genus of rollers, Coracias, by having proportionally longer wings and shorter legs. These morphological differences reflect differences in foraging technique. Whereas Coracias rollers forage from a fixed perch and take prey by swooping down onto it on the ground, the faster and more agile Eurystomus rollers catch their prey on the wing. Unlike the Coracias they do not perform the "rolling" display which gives the family its common name.

Dollarbird    Eurystomus orientalis 
Description: The Dollarbird, also known as Oriental dollarbird, has a brown head that transitions to blue-green body. It has a blue throat, wings, and tail. The legs and bill are red. In the non-breeding season, the reds become orange. It is so named because of the pale / white coin shaped spots on its wings. It has an impressive courting ritual: a high speed dive during which it rolls rapidly. The dive-roll routine is repeated several times. It is 27 to 32 cm long and weights 110 to 210 grams. It lays an average of 4 eggs, incubates about 23 days, and fledges at least 23 day.

Range: Asia, Australia.

Habitat: Woodland, farmland accompanied with large trees, open country with nearby trees.

Diet: Large insects such as beetles, grasshoppers, crickets. Usually sights prey from a perch and then catches it on the wing.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) Brian_McCauley.  2) Vijay_Ismavel - India  3) Victor_Fazio  4) Lip_kee - Singapore  



Dollarbird, Azure  Eurystomus azureus 
Description: The Azure dollarbird, also known as azure roller, has mainly dark purple-blue plumage. There are white wing patches both below and above. It has been considered a subspecies of the Oriental dollarbird. The above photo of an Oriental dollar bird with wings extended (taken in Singapore not Maluki Islands) looks extremely like an azure dollarbird.

Range:  Maluku Islands in Indonesia. These islands are east of New Guinea.

Habitat: Forests and lands close to forest edges.

Diet: Insects.

Conservation status: The azure dollarbird is listed as Near Threatened as its population is less than 10,000 and decreasing due to habitat degradation.
Image by: 1) John Gerrard Keulemans - the rear bird is an azure dollarbid   2) Paulo Alves 



Roller,_Blue-throated  Eurystomus gularis 
Description: The blue-throated roller has mainly chestnut-brown plumage, a blue throat patch, blue wings, blue tail, anda yellow bill.  It is 25 cm long and weighs 82 to 118 grams. The blue-throated roller lays 2 to 3 eggs, The juvenile shows bluish on the underparts.

Range: Central Africa.

Habitat:  Forests, wooded savanna, farms with large trees.

Diet: Flying insects, insects on ground, centipedes, frogs. Takes prey mostly while in the air, often above the forest canopy.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) Francesco_Veronesi - Ghana  2) Sergey Pisarevskiy - Uganda   3) Michael and Helen Cox 
1) Probably juvenile



Roller,_Broad-billed   Eurystomus glaucurus 
Description: The Broad-billed Roller has cinnamon upperparts including the head. The fore-neck and breast are lilac. It has a brown belly, yellow bill. It is 27 to 29 cm long and weighs 84 to 166 grams. It has 2 to 3 white eggs.

Range: Sub-Saharan tropical Africa including Madagascar.

Habitat: Forests, forest clearings, treed grasslands, scrubland.

Diet: Ants, termites, grasshoppers, crickets, bees, flies. Usually perches on a high branch and then catches prey on the wing.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) Frank_Vassen - Madagascar   2) Nik_Borrow - Liberia   3) Bernard_Dupont - Madagascar  4) Farid_Amadou_Bahleman





Cuckoo-Rollers

Order Leptosomiformes    Family Leptosomidae


The Leptosomidae family contains just one species, the cucko-roller which belongs to its own order Leptosomiformes. Unlike the true rollers and ground-rollers, the cuckoo-roller sexes have a very different appearance. .

Genus  Leptosomus - 1 species

Cuckoo-Roller  Leptosomus discolor 
Description: The male cuckoo-roller has dark iridescent green upperparts. It has a grey head and neck changing gradually to white on the belly. There is a black crown and black eye-line. The female has brown upperparts and pale underparts with dark spots. The eyes are set far back in the face, the legs and feet are small. The two inner toes face forward and the two  outer to the rear. It is 40 to 50 cm long

Range: Comoro, Madagascar.

Habitat: Forests, tree plantations.

Diet: Mainly insects such as locust, grasshoppers, cockroaches. Also reptiles, carrion. Usually flies from a perch to catch the prey in flight. Also will fly to the ground for prey. It lays about 4 eggs in unlined tree cavities, incubates in 20 days, and fledges in about a month.

Conservation status: Least Concern.
Image by: 1) Frank Wouters   2) Copepodo   3) David_Cook
1) Female  2) Juvenile male  3) Male





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