Field Guide
Hildebrandt’s Starling
Lamprotornis hildebrandti Swahili: Kwenzi-jangwa

- Type
- Bird
- Daily Rhythm
- Diurnal
- Diet
- Omnivorous
- Weight
- 50-69 g
- Size
- Length: 18 cm
This species, which is often mistaken for the superb starling, is named for Johannes Hildebrandt, who was born in Dusseldorf in 1847 and was the first European collector to obtain specimens.
Hildebrandt’s starlings are often seen in pairs or small flocks, and sometimes join superb starlings while feeding.
Calls include a pattern of low, short notes that can end in tentative rising notes.
A ground forager, this bird sometimes feeds with other starlings, including greater blue-eared starlings, superb starlings, and wattled starlings.
Least concern
Hildebrandt’s starlings consume mainly insects, such as beetles, grasshoppers, and termites, including insects that have been disturbed by mammals.
Hildebrandt’s starlings build a nest of hair or plant fibers in old woodpecker holes in trees or holes in fence posts or other wood structures. Both parents feed the chicks after the eggs hatch.
Great spotted cuckoos parasitize nests.
They are found in only the central and south-central regions of Kenya.
These birds are found only in Kenya and Tanzania.


