Rainbow Bee-eater

IUCN Least Concern (LC)

About the Rainbow Bee-eater

Bird Overview

The Rainbow Bee-Eater is a spectacular bird. With its green, blue, chestnut and yellow plumage, its slim build, slender curved bill and distinctive streamers that extend from the end of its tail, it is simply beautiful.

Research shows a marked decline for the Rainbow Bee-eater (and some other aerial insectivories) in the East Coast region, where reporting rates for this species have dropped by over 50% in the since 2001.

Scientific name

  • Merops ornatus

Location

Conservation status (IUCN)

Identification

Identification

A striking, colourful bird, the Rainbow Bee-eater is medium sized, with a long slim curved bill and a long tail with distinctive tail-streamers. It has a golden crown and a red eye set in a wide black stripe from the base of the bill to the ears, which is edged with a thin blue line. The throat is orange-yellow, with a broad black band separating it from a green breast. The upperparts are green, with the flight feathers coppery and black tipped. The underwings are bright orange, with a black edge. The lower abdomen is blue. The tail is black, including the long tail streamers, with a blue tinge. Females have shorter, thicker tail streamers than males, but are otherwise similar. Young birds are duller and greener, lacking the black band on the chest and the long tail streamers.

Songs and Calls

A liquid ‘prrp prrp’ given in flight. Bird call recorded by: Fred Van Gessel

How to identify the Rainbow Bee-eater

Rainbow bee eater, orange winges outstretched ready to fly from branch, bird facing and looking to the left.

IUCN Least Concern (LC)

Bee-eaters

Colour

  • Black
  • Blue
  • Brown
  • Green

Size

  • Large (60 to 75 cm, eg: ibis)

Shape

  • Kingfisher

Songs & calls

Rainbow Bee-eater

The main song & call.

Credits to the owner/recorder.

Habitat & distribution

Habitat

The Rainbow Bee-eater is most often found in open forests, woodlands and shrublands, and cleared areas, usually near water. It will be found on farmland with remnant vegetation and in orchards and vineyards. It will use disturbed sites such as quarries, cuttings and mines to build its nesting tunnels.

Distribution map

image/svg+xml background

Behaviour

Behaviour

Rainbow Bee-Eaters are a familiar sight in many lightly-timbered parts of mainland Australia, where they often perch on fence-posts or overhead wires, then launch after flying insects, flying swiftly, sometimes with rapid twists and turns, before snapping the insect in its bill, and returning to the perch to eat it.

Feeding

Feeding

Rainbow Bee-eaters eat insects, mainly catching bees and wasps, as well as dragonflies, beetles, butterflies and moths. They catch flying insects on the wing and carry them back to a perch to beat them against it before swallowing them. Bees and wasps are rubbed against the perch to remove the stings and venom glands.

Breeding

Breeding

Rainbow Bee-eaters gather in small flocks before returning to summer breeding areas after over-wintering in the north (apart from the resident northern populations). Both males and females select a suitable nesting site in a sandy bank and dig a long tunnel (average length: 89.4 cm) leading to a nesting chamber, which is often lined with grasses. Both parents incubate the eggs and both feed the young, sometimes with the assistance of auxiliaries (helpers).

Conservation

IUCN Least Concern (LC)

  • EX
  • EW
  • CR
  • EN
  • VU
  • NT
  • LC
  • DD

IUCN status reflects the conservation status of this species globally.

Threats to the species

  1. Collisions with infrastructure

    Injury or death caused by birds striking human-made structures such as buildings, windows, powerlines, wind turbines, fences, or vehicles. 
  2. Invasive species

    Non-native plants, animals, or pathogens that negatively affect native species through competition, predation, habitat alteration, or disease. Includes predation by foxes, cats, rats, and even Australian animals that have been translocated (eg:  Sugar Gliders in Tasmania).