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Kookaburra (Dacelo gigas)
Kookaburra (Dacelo gigas)

kookaburra

bird
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Also known as: Dacelo gigas, bushman’s clock, laughing jackass, laughing kookaburra
Also called:
laughing kookaburra or laughing jackass

kookaburra, (speciesDacelo novaeguineae), eastern Australianbird of thekingfisher family (Alcedinidae), whose call sounds like fiendish laughter. This gray-brown, woodland-dwelling bird reaches a length of 43 cm (17 inches), with an 8- to 10-cm (3.2- to 4-inch) beak. In its native habitat it eats invertebrates and small vertebrates, including venomous snakes. In westernAustralia andNew Zealand, where it has been introduced, the kookaburra has been known to attack chickens and ducklings. Defending their territory year-round, a monogamous pair of these birds lays twoclutches of two to four white eggs in its nest in a tree hole. The young often remain with the parents and help raise the next year’s brood.

kookaburraAudio clip of a laughing kookaburra (Dacelo novaeguineae).

Also sometimes called the “bushman’s clock,” the kookaburra is heard very early in the morning and just after sunset. The related blue-winged kookaburra (D. leachii), which does not “laugh,” is found across northern Australia.

This article was most recently revised and updated byRichard Pallardy.

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