Many of the world's species of Kingfishers are endangered. The Guam Kingfisher, the Micronesian Kingfisher, and the Marquesan Kingfisher are just a few that are threatened with extinction.
A kingfisher is a bird, and birds are consumers. The kingfisher eats small fish and other invertebrates, and so is a secondary or tertiary consumer.
there are a number of predators who will prey upon a Kingfisher but these will generally be opportunistic predators rather than predators trying to find a particular prey. examples of these may be other birds such as hawks and falcons or at might there will be predators such as tree snakes or pythons. In the nest situations you will have monitors, goanna's, rats snakes etc who will eat the young, eggs or even the sitting parent bird.
Birds such as egrets, herons, loons, and mergansers eat similar food sources.
A kingfisher does not eat seeds. They eat fish, crustaceans, worms, frogs, molluscs, reptiles, insects and spiders. They have also been known to eat other birds and small mammals.
One of the top predators for yabbies is an Azure Kingfisher. Unlike other animals, the Azure Kingfisher dives under the water to catch the yabby. Other birds include kookaburras, spoonbills, jabirus and even common domesticated birds such as chickens, ducks and geese. These birds usually either use their beaks to pluck the yabby from the water or just eat them when the yabby are out of water.
When competing for nesting cavities house sparrows often attack other birds. They attack bluebirds by pecking at their scalp. They often break eggs or kill baby birds.
The will eat insects, pull worms out of the ground, attack and eat other birds or catch fish.
Kingfishers like all birds do not have teeth.
no, they are native Australian birds but they attack other native birds like kookaburras, even cats are sometimes scared! but they can be pests.
Penguins are not people, so they cannot attack "other people." Penguins don't attack people at all, in any rate. They are small birds that live on fish.
A Kookaburra is called a kingfisher because it is a member of the kingfisher family. Like other kingfishers, the kookaburra is characterised by a long, straight, sharp beak, a large head, short legs and a shorter tail than other birds of similar size. The Laughing Kookaburra is believed to be the largest kingfisher species.