Bee-eaters in Britain

Two species of bee-eater have occurred as wild visitors to Britain, with a third species having occurred as an escape from captivity.

European Bee-eater

European Bee-eater

The European Bee-eater occurs in Britain mainly as a spring overshoot. Until the late 20th century the species was a national rarity i.e. a species whose records are collected by the British Birds Rarities Committee. Increasing numbers meant that it was downgraded to a "scarce migrant" from 1991. Bee-eaters are occasionally seen in Britain in autumn, but are much scarcer at that season. The species has occasionally bred.

Breeding attempts

European Bee-eaters have attempted to nest on five known occasions in Britain:

Fiction

Blue-cheeked Bee-eater

Eight sightings of the Blue-cheeked Bee-eater have been recorded. All individuals were adults, and all but one occurred in mid-summer.

Escaped species

One occurrence of the White-fronted Bee-eater has been recorded, as an escape from captivity.[3]

The Northern Carmine Bee-eater has also occurred when one spent 24th May 2002 at Mundesley, Norfolk. No doubt of captive origin, it behaved in a wild manner and easily caught plenty of insects.

References

  1. Birdwatch, no. 173, p. 23.
  2. To the Manor Born, episode 18 - "Birds Vs Bees".
  3. Category E - provisional list of species recorded in Britain, British Ornithologists Union. Archived from the original on 20 July 2011.

General references

Blue-cheeked Bee-eater records were taken from: