Congo [The Democratic Republic of the] (B) (NB), Kenya (NB), Malawi (B), Mozambique (B), South Africa (B), Swaziland (B), Tanzania [United Republic of] (B), Uganda (NB), Zambia (B), Zimbabwe (B).
Breeds south-eastern DRCongo, southern Tanzania, Malawi, north-eastern Zambia, eastern Zimbabwe and adjacent western Mozambique, eastern South Africa (Eastern province and KwaZulu-Natal) and western Swaziland; migrates north to north-eastern DRCongo, southern Uganda and extreme western Kenya.
 
Rarity Status
Currently this species is not classified as a rarity in this country OR information has not been updated.
Population
Estimated population is 2,000 (2010) and decreasing.
Status VU
Grassland loss to afforestation, intense human settlement, cultivation (especially sugarcane), intensive livestock-farming, intense grazing, intensive grass-burning, invasion by non-native trees and bracken and (potentially) small-scale mining is the main threat.
For more information see BirdLife International Species Factsheet.
Voice
A 'chip' or 'chip-chip' uttered in contact. A musical 'bee-bee-bee-bee' uttered in nuptial flight display.
Blue Swallow (Hirundo atrocaerulea) [XC432836]
by Frank Lambert from Chelinda Camp, Nyika National Park, Malawi (flight call)
Blue Swallow (Hirundo atrocaerulea) [XC432835]
by Derek Solomon from Chelinda Camp, Nyika National Park, Malawi (flight call)
Subspecies
No subspecies.
Sometimes considered to form a superspecies with Black-and-rufous Swallow (Hirundo nigrorufa), but morphological differences probably too great to justify such a treatment. Northern population, with plumage washed violet, sometimes separated as subspecies lynesi, but differences insignificant.
Similar Species
Black Sawwing (Psalidoprocne holomelas) which is matt black, not iridescent, with shorter, less deeply forked tail.
References
See References.