Article 2D8E8 In search of Tanzania's bee-eaters

In search of Tanzania's bee-eaters

by
Stephen Moss
from on (#2D8E8)

In the Selous Game Reserve you can see seven different bee-eaters. Each one sports impossibly beautiful colours

Bee-eaters are the supermodels of the bird world: slim, glamorous - and hopelessly out of reach for us mere mortals. But in the Selous Game Reserve, in southern Tanzania, you can see seven different species of bee-eater hawking for insects under sun-filled skies. Each one sports impossibly beautiful colours, outcompeting even the half-a-dozen species of kingfisher we saw here. On a game drive from Selous Impala Camp, in the heart of Africa's largest wildlife reserve, we went in search of the "magnificent seven".

The two commonest species, white-fronted and white-throated, may have similar names, but they are very different in appearance. The white-throated is, by bee-eater standards, almost austere: a plain, foliage green body topped with a black-and-white head.

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