Lamprotornis


Lamprotornis is a large genus of glossy starlings all of which occur in Africa south of the Sahara. They have glossy blue or green upper parts, which is due to hollow melanin granules arranged in a single layer near the feather barbule's surface. This unique arrangement led to some glossy starlings formerly placed in the genus Spreo being transferred to Lamprotornis, since they shared this feature.
The genus Lamprotornis was introduced by the Dutch zoologist Coenraad Jacob Temminck
in 1820. The type species was subsequently designated as the long-tailed glossy starling.
The under parts of these species lack iridescence. They may be blue, purple, yellow or brown. Most Lamprotornis starlings have striking yellow or red irides and some have long tails.
These glossy starlings are found in a variety of habitats from forests to open woodland and gardens. They nest in tree holes, either natural, or made by woodpeckers or barbets, and some will use man-made structures. Most species are resident apart from seasonal or local movement, but Shelley's starling is migratory. Most species are gregarious outside the breeding season.
Lamprotornis glossy starlings are omnivorous and mostly feed on the ground, although they will take fruit from trees. Some will feed on or near large mammals to find insects.

Species

The genus contains 22 species.
Common nameScientific nameImageDistribution
Cape starlingLamprotornis nitensSouthern Africa
Greater blue-eared starlingLamprotornis chalybaeusSenegal east to Ethiopia and south through eastern Africa to northeastern South Africa and Angola
Lesser blue-eared starlingLamprotornis chloropteruswidespread in sub-Saharan Africa
Bronze-tailed starlingLamprotornis chalcurusSenegal through Nigeria to South Sudan and Kenya
Splendid starlingLamprotornis splendiduswidespread in western and central Africa
Principe starlingLamprotornis ornatusendemic to São Tomé and Príncipe
Emerald starlingLamprotornis iris

Guinea, Sierra Leone and Ivory Coast
Purple starlingLamprotornis purpureustropical Africa from Senegal and northern Zaire east to Sudan and west Kenya
Rüppell's starlingLamprotornis purpuropteraSudan, Eritrea and Ethiopia to Tanzania
Long-tailed glossy starlingLamprotornis caudatustropical Africa from Senegal east to Sudan.
Golden-breasted starlingLamprotornis regiusEthiopia and Somalia to northern Tanzania
Meves's starlingLamprotornis mevesiisouthern Africa
Burchell's starlingLamprotornis australissouthern Africa
Sharp-tailed starlingLamprotornis acuticaudussouthern central Africa
Superb starlingLamprotornis superbus

eastern Africa
Hildebrandt's starlingLamprotornis hildebrandti

Ethiopia and Somalia to Kenya.
Shelley's starling,Lamprotornis shelleyieastern Africa
Chestnut-bellied starlingLamprotornis pulcher

Burkina Faso and western Africa
Ashy starlingLamprotornis unicolor

Kenya and Tanzania
Pied starlingLamprotornis bicolor

South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland
Fischer's starlingLamprotornis fischeri

southern Ethiopia and Somalia to eastern Kenya and Tanzania
White-crowned starlingLamprotornis albicapillus

Djibouti, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Somalia.

The limits of this genus have seen recent revision following phylogenetic analysis with molecular markers. For example, the black-bellied starling is now placed in a separate genus Notopholia. On the other hand, genera such as Coccycolius, Spreo and Compsarus were found nested in Lamprotornis and have been merged.