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Imperial pigeon

Ducula is a genus of the pigeon family Columbidae, collectively known as imperial pigeons. They are large to very large pigeons with a heavy build and medium to long tails. They are arboreal, feed mainly on fruit and are closely related to the other genus of fruit-eating doves, Ptilinopus. Both genera display brightly coloured plumage, predominantly green, often with contrasting under-parts of purple, orange or red. Some Ducula have prominently swollen ceres.[2] They have large gapes and swallow seeds whole, playing an important role in seed dispersal.[3]

Imperial pigeon
Purple-tailed imperial pigeon (Ducula rufigaster), endemic to New Guinea
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Columbiformes
Family: Columbidae
Subfamily: Ptilinopinae
Genus: Ducula
Hodgson, 1836
Type species
Ducula insignis[1]
Hodgson, 1836

Imperial pigeons are found in forests of southern Asia, New Guinea, northern Australia and the Pacific islands. Many species are nomadic, travelling long distances to exploit seasonal fruit sources. Some undertake migrations and all are strong fliers.[2] Because of habitat loss and predation, species of Ducula are amongst the most threatened of avian species globally.[4]

Taxonomy edit

The genus Ducula was introduced in 1836 by the English naturalist Brian Houghton Hodgson with Ducula insignis as the type species. This taxon is now considered as a subspecies of the mountain imperial pigeon (Ducula badia).[5][6] The genus name Ducula is from the Latin dux genitive ducis meaning "leader".[7]

The taxonomy of the imperial pigeon is unresolved, with the number of species within the genus Ducula reported variably as 34 [8] and 36.[9][10] Derek Goodwin's 1959 paper on the taxonomy of the genus Ducula[9] divides his arrangement of 36 species into 7 subgroups according to distribution and phenotype. This classification is followed by Gibbs et al.,[10] and followed here.

Species edit

The genus contains 42 species:[6]

Section Image Scientific name Distribution
Poliocephala species-group   Ducula poliocephala (Gray, 1844) pink-bellied imperial pigeon Philippines.
  Ducula forsteni (Bonaparte, 1854) white-bellied imperial pigeon Indonesia (Sulawesi, Buton, Taliabu, Togian, and Peleng.)
  Ducula mindorensis (Whitehead, 1896) Mindoro imperial pigeon Philippines (Mindoro)
Ducula radiata (Quoy & Gaimard, 1830) Grey-headed imperial pigeon Indonesia (Sulawesi)
Carola species-group   Ducula carola (Gray, 1844) Spotted imperial pigeon Philippines
Aenea species-group   Ducula aenea (Linnaeus, 1766) Green imperial pigeon Nepal, southern India and Sri Lanka eastwards to southern China, Indonesia and the Philippines.
Ducula oenothorax (Salvadori, 1892) Enggano imperial pigeon Enggano Island.
Ducula nicobarica (Pelzeln, 1865) Nicobar imperial pigeon Nicobar Islands.
  Ducula perspicillata (Temminck, 1824) Spectacled imperial pigeon Maluku Islands.
Ducula neglecta (Schlegel, 1866) Seram imperial pigeon Moluccas
  Ducula concinna (Wallace, 1865) Elegant imperial pigeon New Guinea, Talaud Islands, Sangihe, islands off southern Sulawesi, the southern Maluku Islands, and the eastern Lesser Sundas from Romang to Tanimbar, east up to the Aru Islands.
  Ducula pacifica (Gmelin, 1789) Pacific imperial pigeon American Samoa, the Cook Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Solomon Islands, Tokelau, Tonga, Tuvalu, Vanuatu, and Wallis and Futuna Islands.
  Ducula oceanica (Desmarest, 1826) Micronesian imperial pigeon Palau, the Caroline Islands, the Marshall Islands and Nauru.
  Ducula aurorae (Peale, 1848) Polynesian imperial pigeon French Polynesia.
  Ducula galeata (Bonaparte, 1855) Marquesan imperial pigeon Nuku Hiva in the Marquesas Islands of French Polynesia.
  Ducula rubricera (Bonaparte, 1854) Red-knobbed imperial pigeon Bismarck Archipelago and the Solomon Islands archipelago.
Ducula myristicivora (Scopoli, 1786) Spice imperial pigeon Indonesia
Ducula geelvinkiana Schlegel, 1873 Geelvink imperial pigeon[11] Indonesia's Schouten Islands
  Ducula rufigaster (Quoy & Gaimard, 1830) Purple-tailed imperial pigeon New Guinea.
  Ducula basilica Bonaparte, 1854 Cinnamon-bellied imperial pigeon Moluccas.
Ducula finschii (Ramsay, 1882) Finsch's imperial pigeon Papua New Guinea.
Ducula chalconota (Salvadori, 1874) Rufescent imperial pigeon New Guinea.
  Ducula pistrinaria Bonaparte, 1855 Island imperial pigeon Bismarck Archipelago and the Solomon Islands archipelago
  Ducula rosacea (Temminck, 1835) Pink-headed imperial pigeon Lesser Sunda Islands of Indonesia
  Ducula whartoni (Sharpe, 1887) Christmas imperial pigeon Christmas Island
  Ducula pickeringii (Cassin, 1854) Grey imperial pigeon Sulu Archipelago, Miangas and Talaud Islands
  Ducula latrans (Peale, 1848) Barking imperial pigeon Fiji
Brenchleyi species-group Ducula brenchleyi (Gray, 1870) Chestnut-bellied imperial pigeon Solomon Islands.
Ducula bakeri (Kinnear, 1928) Vanuatu imperial pigeon Vanuatu
  Ducula goliath (Gray, 1859) Goliath imperial pigeon New Caledonia.
  Ducula pinon (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824) Pinon's imperial pigeon New Guinea.
  Ducula melanochroa (Sclater, 1878) Black imperial pigeon Bismarck Archipelago
  Ducula mullerii (Temminck, 1835) Collared imperial pigeon New Guinea
Zoe's imperial pigeon   Ducula zoeae (Lesson, 1826) Zoe's imperial pigeon New Guinea.
Badia species group   Ducula cuprea (Jerdon, 1840) Malabar imperial pigeon Western Ghats of India.
  Ducula badia (Raffles, 1822) Mountain imperial pigeon Bangladesh, Bhutan, Brunei, Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Thailand, and Vietnam
  Ducula lacernulata (Temminck, 1823) Dark-backed imperial pigeon Lesser Sunda Islands.
  Ducula cineracea (Temminck, 1835) Timor imperial pigeon Timor and Wetar.
Bicolor species-group   Ducula bicolor (Scopoli, 1786) Pied imperial pigeon Myanmar and Thailand, throughout Indonesia and east to the Philippines and the Bird's Head Peninsula in New Guinea.
  Ducula luctuosa (Temminck, 1825) Silver-tipped imperial pigeon Sulawesi
  Ducula spilorrhoa (Gray, 1858) Torresian imperial pigeon Australia (north-east Western Australia, north Northern Territory and north Queensland, including the Torres Strait Islands), New Guinea, Aru Islands, islands in the Geelvink Bay, D'Entrecasteaux Islands and Louisiade Archipelago.
Ducula subflavescens (Finsch, 1886) Yellowish imperial pigeon Bismarck Archipelago.
Ducula salvadorii (Tristram, 1881) Louisiade imperial pigeon Papua New Guinea.


A new extinct species was described in a 2020 study of prehistoric avifaunas from the Kingdom of Tonga:[12]

  • Shutler's fruit pigeon (Ducula shutleri Worthy & Burley sp. nov.)

Description edit

Poliocephala species-group edit

 
White-bellied imperial pigeon (D. forsteni) showing distinctive hood

Four species of imperial pigeon are found in Philippines and Sulawesi. All have a distinct pale band across the centre of the tail, and a rich green or purple dorsum.[2] This grouping shares characteristics and distribution with Ptilinopus, and forms a link between the genera. The pink-belled (D. poliocephala) and the white-bellied (D. forsteni) imperial pigeon are similar and allopatric species. The Mindoro (D. mindorensis) and the grey-headed (D. radiata) imperial pigeons differ in size but are otherwise similar.[10]

Carola species-group edit

The spotted imperial pigeon (D. carola) is sympatric to D. poliocephala, and though smaller, short tailed and with spotted plumage, it is similar enough in appearance and distribution to suggest the taxa are related.[9][10]

Aenea species-group edit

 
The Marquesan imperial pigeon (D. galeata) showing prominent pale cere

This group's nominate species is the green imperial pigeon (D. aenea), distinctive by its iridescent green, purple or bronze upper-parts and wings. The species-group is widespread through the Asia-Pacific. It is further separated into subgroups by Goodwin.

  • Three Asian species with iridescent green upper-parts, pink head and neck with normal sized ceres; D. aenea, the elegant (D. concinna) and the white-eyed or spectacled (D. perspicillata) imperial pigeons.
  • The pacifica subgroup of six species, similar to aenea but with enlarged ceres, and distributed throughout the Pacific. The Pacific (D. pacifica) and the Micronesian (D. oceania) imperial pigeons are similar allospecies, while the Polynesian (D. aurorae) and Marquesan (D. galeata) imperial pigeons are larger birds with dark plumage. The red-knobbed imperial pigeon (D. rubricera) and the spice imperial pigeon (D. myristicivora) are similar but found in Melanesia and New Guinea.
  • The finschii subgroup of four species which may be New Guinea representatives of D. aenea stock; the purple-tailed (D. rufigaster), cinnamon-bellied (D. basilica) and Finsch's imperial pigeons, which all inhabit offshore islands. The shining or rufescent imperial pigeon (D. chalconota) occupies more elevated ranges on the New Guinea mainland.[10]
  • Another subgroup similar to aenea, but with upper parts not iridescent and less well defined, is the pink-headed imperial pigeon (D. rosacea) as the nominate species, the Christmas Island (D. whartoni), the grey (D. pickeringii) and the island (D. pistrinaria) imperial pigeons.

Brenchleyi species-group edit

 
The collared imperial pigeon (D. mullerii) showing distinctive black collar

Contains 4 subgroups of large dark chestnut-bellied pigeons.

  • The chestnut-bellied imperial pigeon (D. brenchleyi) is the nominate species with the Baker's (D. bakeri), Peale's (D. latrans), and New Caledonian (D. goliath) imperial pigeons, being allopatric through the Western Pacific islands.
  • The Pinon imperial pigeon (D. pinon) is found in New Guinea and its islands.
  • The collared imperial pigeon (D. mullerii) is found in New Guinea and Aru and has a distinctive dark collar.
  • The Bismarck imperial pigeon (D. melanochroa) is found on the Bismarck Archipelago.

Zoe's imperial pigeon edit

D. zoeae of Indonesia and New Guinea, is sufficiently distinct in colour to be placed in a species-group of its own.

Badia species group edit

Bicolor species-group edit

 
Pied imperial pigeon (D. bicolor)

The pied imperial pigeons form a discrete group of large white pigeons with black wingtips, found in New Guinea and its islands, and northern Australia. Goodwin recognised three species; the pied (D. bicolor) the white (D. luctuosa) and the Torresian (D. spilorrhoa).[2] The three allopatric species are closely related and subsequent authors have challenged this ranking, Johnstone including all three in a single species.[13] Gibbs et al. group D. bicolor and D. spilorrhoa together, but adds the yellow-tinted imperial pigeon (D. subflavescens) as another species.[10] Frith includes D. subflavescens as a race of D. spilorrhoa.[14] Sibley and Monroe (1990) follow Goodwin.[8]

The difficulty in assigning or removing species rank is compounded by the lack of data on behaviour and breeding patterns of the taxa.[9][15] Similar species are allopatric, and there is no data on whether the species freely interbreed or not. Data on voice and behaviour is similarly poor.[2][10]

The confusion is not helped by English naming. D. bicolor is variously described as the nutmeg pigeon, the Torres Strait pigeon, and the pied imperial pigeon. D. spilorrhoa is also described as the nutmeg pigeon, the white nutmeg pigeon, the Australian pied pigeon, the Australian pied imperial pigeon, the Torres Strait pigeon or the Torresian imperial pigeon.[14]

Distribution and habitat edit

Imperial pigeons are only found in southern Asia, Australia, New Guinea and the Pacific, a distribution from the Himalayas (D. badia) to Tahiti in the South Pacific (D. aurorare). The greatest diversity of birds is in New Guinea. Imperial pigeons are strong fliers, are capable of flight over oceans, and have been successful in colonising islands and archipelagos.[10]

Australia has a poor representation of Ducula amongst its fauna, with only one species breeding on the mainland (D. spilorrhoa).[14] There is no clear explanation why more species of Ducula did not cross the Torres Strait islands to reach mainland Australia. The genus Lopholaimus, comprising only one species may have been well represented on the Australian mainland before European settlement, thus excluding Ducula.[2]

Imperial pigeons are arboreal, and found almost exclusively in forest and woodland habitats where there is availability of fruit bearing trees. About half of the species occupy mountainous forest to elevations of 2500m. Many are found on islands, and live in coastal forests, with a few species inhabiting forest edges or mangroves.[8]

Appearance edit

Tropical species of pigeons can display a rich variety of colour, presumably to facilitate species recognition.[9] The plumage of the seed-eating genera of Columbidae is more often dull brown or grey. Typically imperial pigeons have dark dorsum and wings, ranging from grey to iridescent green. Their breasts are paler, ranging in colour from grey through orange and pink to dark grey. Less conspicuous markings are found on birds isolated to islands.[9] Most species display little or no sexual dimorphism.[10]

Imperial pigeons are large to very large pigeons; typical length is 35 to 45 cm, and they have medium to long tails. The critically endangered Marquesan imperial pigeon is 50 cm long and is the largest arboreal pigeon in the family Columbidae.[16]

Fat quills are present in D. bicolor and D. spilorrhoa. Fat quills are modified feathers that produce a lipoid substance that is used in a similar way to the secretions of the preen gland. Fat quills are found around the rump of D. bicolor and in other Columbidae species.[17][18][19] Preening with the yellow coloured lipid causes variations in colour of the head and shoulders of D. bicolor, ranging from cream to yellow. Colouration differs between individuals and the stage of molt, deeper colouring found just prior to molt, leading to some confusion in identifying taxa. The function of the fat quills is debatable, with suggestions of a sexual signal,[20] an antibacterial, or as an olfactory signal.[19] Yellow lipoid substance can be expressed from the base of a broken rachis [17]

Behaviour edit

There is a paucity of information on most species of Ducula, many of which are shy and live in remote areas, making observation difficult. Breeding and nesting behaviour of species has been poorly documented.[2][10] Though large and numerous, birds can be inconspicuous, feeding quietly in deep foliage.[14]

Ducula are highly mobile and can travel large distances to find fruit.[21][22] They are strong fliers and able to fly between islands to exploit erratic food sources. Small islands whose flora would be unable to sustain a long term population can provide a temporary food source for nomadic birds.[10] Crome has documented daily flights of more than 32 km from island roosts to the mainland.[23]

Some species live singly or in pairs, but many are highly social, forming flocks of 30 to 50 birds.[10] Pied imperial pigeons favour off shore islands or mangroves for breeding sites. D. spilorrhoa forms large colonies on the Queensland coast, flying to fruit bearing forests during the day and roosting together at night. Low Isles in North Queensland hosted 20,000 to 25,000 birds in the 1971–1973 breeding seasons.[23] A volunteer based count in December 2014 reported a similar number of over 22,000 pied imperial pigeons (pipwatch.net). An anecdotal report from 1908 describes flocks of 100,000 D. spilorrhoa flying from the mainland to their roosting sites on Dunk Island, North Queensland.[24]

Pigeons drink by a pumping or sucking mechanism that allows them to drink with their beak continuously immersed in water.[25] Fruit eating pigeons may utilize water from their diet and have less water requirements than other pigeons.[2]

Diet edit

Imperial pigeons are arboreal, living in forests and mangroves that can supply seasonal fruit from tropical trees, palms, vines and bushes. Most birds clamber through twigs and branches of canopy, leaning or hanging upside down to reach fruit. Fruit is twisted off stems with their bill and swallowed whole. They are able to extend their gapes to 40mm in order to swallow large fruits.[2][26] D. galeata can swallow seeds of 70mm. Their diet can be supplemented with flowers, leaves and insects.[16][23]

In contrast to seed-eating pigeons, Ducula have thin-walled gizzards and short wide guts, allowing large seeds to pass through.[22][27][28] After digesting the fleshy parts, they void the seeds intact, thus playing an important role as seed dispersers.[10]

Other genera of Columbidae have grinding gizzards which either destroy seeds, or regurgitate larger seeds. Some large seeded fruits are eaten by both Nicobar pigeons (Colaenesa nicobarica) and imperial pigeons, with the former destroying seeds and the latter excreting them intact .[2][22]

Imperial pigeons are amongst the largest frugivores in the forest, and can disperse seeds from fruit too large for most other species to handle. A fruit size of 30 mm would exclude all vertebrates other than hornbills (Bucerotidae) and Ducula.[22] Medium-sized pigeons tend to feed on medium-sized fruit, while larger pigeons feed on larger fruit.[29] Pacific pigeons (D. pacifica) are shown to be excellent seed dispersers in Tonga and are thus critical in the management of forests throughout their habitat.[28]

Reproduction edit

Imperial pigeons construct somewhat flimsy nests of loosely woven twigs placed in the fork of a tree. Species that roost in mangroves construct more substantial nests from mangrove shoots.[14] They generally lay a single egg with a relatively short incubation period. Both sexes share incubation and care of nestlings.[2] Ducula, typical of most pigeons, produce a nutritiously rich crop milk which allows the chicks to rapidly fledge and leave the nest, reducing their period of vulnerability. The breeding cycle is short, allowing several broods to be reared in succession over an extended summer breeding season.[10]

Crop milk is a thick cheesy substance, derived from squamous cells sloughed off from the crop of both male and female pigeons which promotes a high growth rate in squabs. There are no studies of the composition of crop milk specific to Ducula. However, in domestic pigeons (Columba livia), the crop milk is found to contain lipids, proteins and enzymes,[30] and also facilitates the transfer of maternal antibodies to squabs, as in mammals.[31] The hypertrophy of crop tissue and production of crop milk is determined by the hormone prolactin, as in mammals.[30]

An abundance of fruit is important to the breeding success of frugivorous birds. Large breeding colonies require unexploited forest to provide fruit bearing trees for daily feeding.[32]

Voice edit

Variable between species, but ranging from typical 'coo' and 'coo-woo' of other pigeon families, to resonant 'whoops',[15] abrupt booming calls or barking notes, to disyllabic deep booming calls.[32]

Migration edit

Columbidae are generally strong fliers and effective colonisers, being able to make across ocean flights to access seasonal fruit supplies.[32] D. bicolor is partly migratory, its distribution changing according to food availability.[15]

Ecology and conservation edit

About one third of extant pigeons in the family Columbidae are endangered to a greater or lesser degree, making the family one of the most threatened in the world. Asia, Australasia and Oceania are home to nearly two-thirds of extant species of Columbidae, but three quarters of those species are threatened.[4][10]

The greatest threats to Columbidae species is habitat loss and degradation, hunting by man, and alien predators.[4] Other threats include disease and possible competition from introduced species.[16] Large flocks of Ducula are mobile and able to exploit large areas for food sources, but are nevertheless vulnerable to large scale loss of forests.

Pigeons are exploited by man for food and sport. Hunting of D. spillorhoa on the Australian mainland has reduced populations.[2][14] Hunting for food remains a problem in Asia and the Pacific as Columbidae provides a palatable source of protein.[4] Historically, human habitation has been associated with extinctions.[33]

Many species of Ducula live on forested islands in the Indian Ocean, SE Asian archipelagos and on Pacific and Australasian islands. Island species are particularly vulnerable as highly specialised populations, ill-prepared for introduced predators such as cats, rats and stoats.[34]

One of the most threatened species of Ducula is the Marquesan imperial pigeon (D. galeata) whose numbers have been reduced from 250 individuals in 1998 to fewer than 100 birds in 2000. A translocation programme has been initiated, increasing the number of islands in which D. galeata has a breeding colony.[16]

Frugivorous pigeons play an important role in seed dispersal and the preservation of tropical forest diversity.[4][27] Population loss may have a detrimental effect on fauna of a region, especially when deforestation by logging leaves large cleared areas needing rehabilitation.[35][36]

References edit

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External links edit

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Ducula is a genus of the pigeon family Columbidae collectively known as imperial pigeons They are large to very large pigeons with a heavy build and medium to long tails They are arboreal feed mainly on fruit and are closely related to the other genus of fruit eating doves Ptilinopus Both genera display brightly coloured plumage predominantly green often with contrasting under parts of purple orange or red Some Ducula have prominently swollen ceres 2 They have large gapes and swallow seeds whole playing an important role in seed dispersal 3 Imperial pigeonPurple tailed imperial pigeon Ducula rufigaster endemic to New GuineaScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder ColumbiformesFamily ColumbidaeSubfamily PtilinopinaeGenus DuculaHodgson 1836Type speciesDucula insignis 1 Hodgson 1836Imperial pigeons are found in forests of southern Asia New Guinea northern Australia and the Pacific islands Many species are nomadic travelling long distances to exploit seasonal fruit sources Some undertake migrations and all are strong fliers 2 Because of habitat loss and predation species of Ducula are amongst the most threatened of avian species globally 4 Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Species 2 Description 2 1 Poliocephala species group 2 2 Carola species group 2 3 Aenea species group 2 4 Brenchleyi species group 2 5 Zoe s imperial pigeon 2 6 Badia species group 2 7 Bicolor species group 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Appearance 5 Behaviour 5 1 Diet 5 2 Reproduction 5 3 Voice 5 4 Migration 6 Ecology and conservation 7 References 8 External linksTaxonomy editThe genus Ducula was introduced in 1836 by the English naturalist Brian Houghton Hodgson with Ducula insignis as the type species This taxon is now considered as a subspecies of the mountain imperial pigeon Ducula badia 5 6 The genus name Ducula is from the Latin dux genitive ducis meaning leader 7 The taxonomy of the imperial pigeon is unresolved with the number of species within the genus Ducula reported variably as 34 8 and 36 9 10 Derek Goodwin s 1959 paper on the taxonomy of the genus Ducula 9 divides his arrangement of 36 species into 7 subgroups according to distribution and phenotype This classification is followed by Gibbs et al 10 and followed here Species edit The genus contains 42 species 6 Section Image Scientific name DistributionPoliocephala species group nbsp Ducula poliocephala Gray 1844 pink bellied imperial pigeon Philippines nbsp Ducula forsteni Bonaparte 1854 white bellied imperial pigeon Indonesia Sulawesi Buton Taliabu Togian and Peleng nbsp Ducula mindorensis Whitehead 1896 Mindoro imperial pigeon Philippines Mindoro Ducula radiata Quoy amp Gaimard 1830 Grey headed imperial pigeon Indonesia Sulawesi Carola species group nbsp Ducula carola Gray 1844 Spotted imperial pigeon PhilippinesAenea species group nbsp Ducula aenea Linnaeus 1766 Green imperial pigeon Nepal southern India and Sri Lanka eastwards to southern China Indonesia and the Philippines Ducula oenothorax Salvadori 1892 Enggano imperial pigeon Enggano Island Ducula nicobarica Pelzeln 1865 Nicobar imperial pigeon Nicobar Islands nbsp Ducula perspicillata Temminck 1824 Spectacled imperial pigeon Maluku Islands Ducula neglecta Schlegel 1866 Seram imperial pigeon Moluccas nbsp Ducula concinna Wallace 1865 Elegant imperial pigeon New Guinea Talaud Islands Sangihe islands off southern Sulawesi the southern Maluku Islands and the eastern Lesser Sundas from Romang to Tanimbar east up to the Aru Islands nbsp Ducula pacifica Gmelin 1789 Pacific imperial pigeon American Samoa the Cook Islands Fiji Kiribati Niue Papua New Guinea Samoa Solomon Islands Tokelau Tonga Tuvalu Vanuatu and Wallis and Futuna Islands nbsp Ducula oceanica Desmarest 1826 Micronesian imperial pigeon Palau the Caroline Islands the Marshall Islands and Nauru nbsp Ducula aurorae Peale 1848 Polynesian imperial pigeon French Polynesia nbsp Ducula galeata Bonaparte 1855 Marquesan imperial pigeon Nuku Hiva in the Marquesas Islands of French Polynesia nbsp Ducula rubricera Bonaparte 1854 Red knobbed imperial pigeon Bismarck Archipelago and the Solomon Islands archipelago Ducula myristicivora Scopoli 1786 Spice imperial pigeon IndonesiaDucula geelvinkiana Schlegel 1873 Geelvink imperial pigeon 11 Indonesia s Schouten Islands nbsp Ducula rufigaster Quoy amp Gaimard 1830 Purple tailed imperial pigeon New Guinea nbsp Ducula basilica Bonaparte 1854 Cinnamon bellied imperial pigeon Moluccas Ducula finschii Ramsay 1882 Finsch s imperial pigeon Papua New Guinea Ducula chalconota Salvadori 1874 Rufescent imperial pigeon New Guinea nbsp Ducula pistrinaria Bonaparte 1855 Island imperial pigeon Bismarck Archipelago and the Solomon Islands archipelago nbsp Ducula rosacea Temminck 1835 Pink headed imperial pigeon Lesser Sunda Islands of Indonesia nbsp Ducula whartoni Sharpe 1887 Christmas imperial pigeon Christmas Island nbsp Ducula pickeringii Cassin 1854 Grey imperial pigeon Sulu Archipelago Miangas and Talaud Islands nbsp Ducula latrans Peale 1848 Barking imperial pigeon FijiBrenchleyi species group Ducula brenchleyi Gray 1870 Chestnut bellied imperial pigeon Solomon Islands Ducula bakeri Kinnear 1928 Vanuatu imperial pigeon Vanuatu nbsp Ducula goliath Gray 1859 Goliath imperial pigeon New Caledonia nbsp Ducula pinon Quoy amp Gaimard 1824 Pinon s imperial pigeon New Guinea nbsp Ducula melanochroa Sclater 1878 Black imperial pigeon Bismarck Archipelago nbsp Ducula mullerii Temminck 1835 Collared imperial pigeon New GuineaZoe s imperial pigeon nbsp Ducula zoeae Lesson 1826 Zoe s imperial pigeon New Guinea Badia species group nbsp Ducula cuprea Jerdon 1840 Malabar imperial pigeon Western Ghats of India nbsp Ducula badia Raffles 1822 Mountain imperial pigeon Bangladesh Bhutan Brunei Cambodia China India Indonesia Laos Malaysia Myanmar Nepal Thailand and Vietnam nbsp Ducula lacernulata Temminck 1823 Dark backed imperial pigeon Lesser Sunda Islands nbsp Ducula cineracea Temminck 1835 Timor imperial pigeon Timor and Wetar Bicolor species group nbsp Ducula bicolor Scopoli 1786 Pied imperial pigeon Myanmar and Thailand throughout Indonesia and east to the Philippines and the Bird s Head Peninsula in New Guinea nbsp Ducula luctuosa Temminck 1825 Silver tipped imperial pigeon Sulawesi nbsp Ducula spilorrhoa Gray 1858 Torresian imperial pigeon Australia north east Western Australia north Northern Territory and north Queensland including the Torres Strait Islands New Guinea Aru Islands islands in the Geelvink Bay D Entrecasteaux Islands and Louisiade Archipelago Ducula subflavescens Finsch 1886 Yellowish imperial pigeon Bismarck Archipelago Ducula salvadorii Tristram 1881 Louisiade imperial pigeon Papua New Guinea A new extinct species was described in a 2020 study of prehistoric avifaunas from the Kingdom of Tonga 12 Shutler s fruit pigeon Ducula shutleri Worthy amp Burley sp nov Description editPoliocephala species group edit nbsp White bellied imperial pigeon D forsteni showing distinctive hoodFour species of imperial pigeon are found in Philippines and Sulawesi All have a distinct pale band across the centre of the tail and a rich green or purple dorsum 2 This grouping shares characteristics and distribution with Ptilinopus and forms a link between the genera The pink belled D poliocephala and the white bellied D forsteni imperial pigeon are similar and allopatric species The Mindoro D mindorensis and the grey headed D radiata imperial pigeons differ in size but are otherwise similar 10 Carola species group edit The spotted imperial pigeon D carola is sympatric to D poliocephala and though smaller short tailed and with spotted plumage it is similar enough in appearance and distribution to suggest the taxa are related 9 10 Aenea species group edit nbsp The Marquesan imperial pigeon D galeata showing prominent pale cereThis group s nominate species is the green imperial pigeon D aenea distinctive by its iridescent green purple or bronze upper parts and wings The species group is widespread through the Asia Pacific It is further separated into subgroups by Goodwin Three Asian species with iridescent green upper parts pink head and neck with normal sized ceres D aenea the elegant D concinna and the white eyed or spectacled D perspicillata imperial pigeons The pacifica subgroup of six species similar to aenea but with enlarged ceres and distributed throughout the Pacific The Pacific D pacifica and the Micronesian D oceania imperial pigeons are similar allospecies while the Polynesian D aurorae and Marquesan D galeata imperial pigeons are larger birds with dark plumage The red knobbed imperial pigeon D rubricera and the spice imperial pigeon D myristicivora are similar but found in Melanesia and New Guinea The finschii subgroup of four species which may be New Guinea representatives of D aenea stock the purple tailed D rufigaster cinnamon bellied D basilica and Finsch s imperial pigeons which all inhabit offshore islands The shining or rufescent imperial pigeon D chalconota occupies more elevated ranges on the New Guinea mainland 10 Another subgroup similar to aenea but with upper parts not iridescent and less well defined is the pink headed imperial pigeon D rosacea as the nominate species the Christmas Island D whartoni the grey D pickeringii and the island D pistrinaria imperial pigeons Brenchleyi species group edit nbsp The collared imperial pigeon D mullerii showing distinctive black collarContains 4 subgroups of large dark chestnut bellied pigeons The chestnut bellied imperial pigeon D brenchleyi is the nominate species with the Baker s D bakeri Peale s D latrans and New Caledonian D goliath imperial pigeons being allopatric through the Western Pacific islands The Pinon imperial pigeon D pinon is found in New Guinea and its islands The collared imperial pigeon D mullerii is found in New Guinea and Aru and has a distinctive dark collar The Bismarck imperial pigeon D melanochroa is found on the Bismarck Archipelago Zoe s imperial pigeon edit D zoeae of Indonesia and New Guinea is sufficiently distinct in colour to be placed in a species group of its own Badia species group edit The mountain D badia and the dark backed D lacernulata imperial pigeons have a widespread distribution the former from Indian subcontinent to south China and Malaysia and the latter in southern Indonesia The Timor imperial pigeon D cineracea is a similar grey pigeon but found in Timor Bicolor species group edit nbsp Pied imperial pigeon D bicolor The pied imperial pigeons form a discrete group of large white pigeons with black wingtips found in New Guinea and its islands and northern Australia Goodwin recognised three species the pied D bicolor the white D luctuosa and the Torresian D spilorrhoa 2 The three allopatric species are closely related and subsequent authors have challenged this ranking Johnstone including all three in a single species 13 Gibbs et al group D bicolor and D spilorrhoa together but adds the yellow tinted imperial pigeon D subflavescens as another species 10 Frith includes D subflavescens as a race of D spilorrhoa 14 Sibley and Monroe 1990 follow Goodwin 8 The difficulty in assigning or removing species rank is compounded by the lack of data on behaviour and breeding patterns of the taxa 9 15 Similar species are allopatric and there is no data on whether the species freely interbreed or not Data on voice and behaviour is similarly poor 2 10 The confusion is not helped by English naming D bicolor is variously described as the nutmeg pigeon the Torres Strait pigeon and the pied imperial pigeon D spilorrhoa is also described as the nutmeg pigeon the white nutmeg pigeon the Australian pied pigeon the Australian pied imperial pigeon the Torres Strait pigeon or the Torresian imperial pigeon 14 Distribution and habitat editImperial pigeons are only found in southern Asia Australia New Guinea and the Pacific a distribution from the Himalayas D badia to Tahiti in the South Pacific D aurorare The greatest diversity of birds is in New Guinea Imperial pigeons are strong fliers are capable of flight over oceans and have been successful in colonising islands and archipelagos 10 Australia has a poor representation of Ducula amongst its fauna with only one species breeding on the mainland D spilorrhoa 14 There is no clear explanation why more species of Ducula did not cross the Torres Strait islands to reach mainland Australia The genus Lopholaimus comprising only one species may have been well represented on the Australian mainland before European settlement thus excluding Ducula 2 Imperial pigeons are arboreal and found almost exclusively in forest and woodland habitats where there is availability of fruit bearing trees About half of the species occupy mountainous forest to elevations of 2500m Many are found on islands and live in coastal forests with a few species inhabiting forest edges or mangroves 8 Appearance editTropical species of pigeons can display a rich variety of colour presumably to facilitate species recognition 9 The plumage of the seed eating genera of Columbidae is more often dull brown or grey Typically imperial pigeons have dark dorsum and wings ranging from grey to iridescent green Their breasts are paler ranging in colour from grey through orange and pink to dark grey Less conspicuous markings are found on birds isolated to islands 9 Most species display little or no sexual dimorphism 10 Imperial pigeons are large to very large pigeons typical length is 35 to 45 cm and they have medium to long tails The critically endangered Marquesan imperial pigeon is 50 cm long and is the largest arboreal pigeon in the family Columbidae 16 Fat quills are present in D bicolor and D spilorrhoa Fat quills are modified feathers that produce a lipoid substance that is used in a similar way to the secretions of the preen gland Fat quills are found around the rump of D bicolor and in other Columbidae species 17 18 19 Preening with the yellow coloured lipid causes variations in colour of the head and shoulders of D bicolor ranging from cream to yellow Colouration differs between individuals and the stage of molt deeper colouring found just prior to molt leading to some confusion in identifying taxa The function of the fat quills is debatable with suggestions of a sexual signal 20 an antibacterial or as an olfactory signal 19 Yellow lipoid substance can be expressed from the base of a broken rachis 17 Behaviour editThere is a paucity of information on most species of Ducula many of which are shy and live in remote areas making observation difficult Breeding and nesting behaviour of species has been poorly documented 2 10 Though large and numerous birds can be inconspicuous feeding quietly in deep foliage 14 Ducula are highly mobile and can travel large distances to find fruit 21 22 They are strong fliers and able to fly between islands to exploit erratic food sources Small islands whose flora would be unable to sustain a long term population can provide a temporary food source for nomadic birds 10 Crome has documented daily flights of more than 32 km from island roosts to the mainland 23 Some species live singly or in pairs but many are highly social forming flocks of 30 to 50 birds 10 Pied imperial pigeons favour off shore islands or mangroves for breeding sites D spilorrhoa forms large colonies on the Queensland coast flying to fruit bearing forests during the day and roosting together at night Low Isles in North Queensland hosted 20 000 to 25 000 birds in the 1971 1973 breeding seasons 23 A volunteer based count in December 2014 reported a similar number of over 22 000 pied imperial pigeons pipwatch net An anecdotal report from 1908 describes flocks of 100 000 D spilorrhoa flying from the mainland to their roosting sites on Dunk Island North Queensland 24 Pigeons drink by a pumping or sucking mechanism that allows them to drink with their beak continuously immersed in water 25 Fruit eating pigeons may utilize water from their diet and have less water requirements than other pigeons 2 Diet edit Imperial pigeons are arboreal living in forests and mangroves that can supply seasonal fruit from tropical trees palms vines and bushes Most birds clamber through twigs and branches of canopy leaning or hanging upside down to reach fruit Fruit is twisted off stems with their bill and swallowed whole They are able to extend their gapes to 40mm in order to swallow large fruits 2 26 D galeata can swallow seeds of 70mm Their diet can be supplemented with flowers leaves and insects 16 23 In contrast to seed eating pigeons Ducula have thin walled gizzards and short wide guts allowing large seeds to pass through 22 27 28 After digesting the fleshy parts they void the seeds intact thus playing an important role as seed dispersers 10 Other genera of Columbidae have grinding gizzards which either destroy seeds or regurgitate larger seeds Some large seeded fruits are eaten by both Nicobar pigeons Colaenesa nicobarica and imperial pigeons with the former destroying seeds and the latter excreting them intact 2 22 Imperial pigeons are amongst the largest frugivores in the forest and can disperse seeds from fruit too large for most other species to handle A fruit size of 30 mm would exclude all vertebrates other than hornbills Bucerotidae and Ducula 22 Medium sized pigeons tend to feed on medium sized fruit while larger pigeons feed on larger fruit 29 Pacific pigeons D pacifica are shown to be excellent seed dispersers in Tonga and are thus critical in the management of forests throughout their habitat 28 Reproduction edit Imperial pigeons construct somewhat flimsy nests of loosely woven twigs placed in the fork of a tree Species that roost in mangroves construct more substantial nests from mangrove shoots 14 They generally lay a single egg with a relatively short incubation period Both sexes share incubation and care of nestlings 2 Ducula typical of most pigeons produce a nutritiously rich crop milk which allows the chicks to rapidly fledge and leave the nest reducing their period of vulnerability The breeding cycle is short allowing several broods to be reared in succession over an extended summer breeding season 10 Crop milk is a thick cheesy substance derived from squamous cells sloughed off from the crop of both male and female pigeons which promotes a high growth rate in squabs There are no studies of the composition of crop milk specific to Ducula However in domestic pigeons Columba livia the crop milk is found to contain lipids proteins and enzymes 30 and also facilitates the transfer of maternal antibodies to squabs as in mammals 31 The hypertrophy of crop tissue and production of crop milk is determined by the hormone prolactin as in mammals 30 An abundance of fruit is important to the breeding success of frugivorous birds Large breeding colonies require unexploited forest to provide fruit bearing trees for daily feeding 32 Voice edit Variable between species but ranging from typical coo and coo woo of other pigeon families to resonant whoops 15 abrupt booming calls or barking notes to disyllabic deep booming calls 32 Migration edit Columbidae are generally strong fliers and effective colonisers being able to make across ocean flights to access seasonal fruit supplies 32 D bicolor is partly migratory its distribution changing according to food availability 15 Ecology and conservation editAbout one third of extant pigeons in the family Columbidae are endangered to a greater or lesser degree making the family one of the most threatened in the world Asia Australasia and Oceania are home to nearly two thirds of extant species of Columbidae but three quarters of those species are threatened 4 10 The greatest threats to Columbidae species is habitat loss and degradation hunting by man and alien predators 4 Other threats include disease and possible competition from introduced species 16 Large flocks of Ducula are mobile and able to exploit large areas for food sources but are nevertheless vulnerable to large scale loss of forests Pigeons are exploited by man for food and sport Hunting of D spillorhoa on the Australian mainland has reduced populations 2 14 Hunting for food remains a problem in Asia and the Pacific as Columbidae provides a palatable source of protein 4 Historically human habitation has been associated with extinctions 33 Many species of Ducula live on forested islands in the Indian Ocean SE Asian archipelagos and on Pacific and Australasian islands Island species are particularly vulnerable as highly specialised populations ill prepared for introduced predators such as cats rats and stoats 34 One of the most threatened species of Ducula is the Marquesan imperial pigeon D galeata whose numbers have been reduced from 250 individuals in 1998 to fewer than 100 birds in 2000 A translocation programme has been initiated increasing the number of islands in which D galeata has a breeding colony 16 Frugivorous pigeons play an important role in seed dispersal and the preservation of tropical forest diversity 4 27 Population loss may have a detrimental effect on fauna of a region especially when deforestation by logging leaves large cleared areas needing rehabilitation 35 36 References edit Columbidae aviansystematics org The Trust for Avian Systematics Retrieved 5 August 2023 a b c d e f g h i j k l Goodwin Derek 1983 Pigeons and Doves of the World London British Museum of Natural History Lambert Frank 1989 Pigeons as seed predators and dispersers of figs in a Malaysian lowland forest Ibis 131 4 521 527 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919x 1989 tb04788 x a b c d e Walker Jonothan 2007 Geographical patterns of threat among pigeons and doves Columbidae Oryx 41 3 289 299 doi 10 1017 s0030605307001016 Hodgson Brian Houghton 1836 Notices of the ornithology of Nepal Asiatic Researches or Transactions of the Society Instituted in Bengal 19 143 192 160 a b Gill Frank Donsker David Rasmussen Pamela eds 2020 Pigeons IOC World Bird List Version 10 1 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 13 March 2020 Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm p 141 ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 a b c Sibley Charles Monroe Burt 1990 Distribution and Taxonomy of Bird of the World New Haven and London Yale University Press a b c d e f Goodwin Derek 1959 Taxonomy of the genus Ducula Ibis 102 4 526 535 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919x 1960 tb07129 x a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Gibbs David Barnes Eustace 2010 Pigeons and Doves A Guide to the Pigeons and Doves of the World London Bloomsbury Publishing Species Updates IOC World Bird List Retrieved 18 June 2021 Worthy Trevor H Burley David V 2020 Prehistoric avifaunas from the Kingdom of Tonga Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 189 3 998 1045 doi 10 1093 zoolinnean zlz110 Johnstone R E 1981 Notes on the distribution ecology and taxonomy of the Red crowned pigeon Ptilinopus regina and Torres Strait pigeon Ducula bicolor in Western Australia Records of the Western Australian Museum 9 7 22 a b c d e f Frith H J 1982 Pigeons and Doves of the World Australia Rigby Publishers a b c Higgins P J Davies S J J F 1996 Handbook of Australian New Zealand and Antarctic Birds Volume 3 Snipes to Penguins Melbourne Oxford University Press a b c d Blanvillain C Thorsen M 2003 The biology of the critically endangered Marquesan imperial pigeon Ducula galena Nuku Hiva Marquesas Archipelago Emu 103 4 381 386 doi 10 1071 mu01022 S2CID 84634823 a b Abdulali Humayin 1967 On the creaminess in the plumage of Ducula bicolor Bulletin of the British Ornithologists Club 86 162 163 Gopinathan K Menon P Menon J 2000 Avian epidermal lipids functional considerations and relationship to feathering American Zoology 40 4 540 552 doi 10 1093 icb 40 4 540 a b Peters A Klonczinski E Delhey K 2010 Fat quill secretion in pigeons could it function as a cosmetic Animal Biology 60 69 78 doi 10 1163 157075610x12610595764219 Delhey K Peters A Kempenaers B 2007 Cosmetic coloration in birds occurrence function and evolution American Naturalist 169 S145 58 doi 10 1086 510095 PMID 19426089 S2CID 29592388 Symes C T Stuart J M 2007 Patterns of supra canopy flight by pigeons and parrots at a hill forest site in Papua New Guinea Emu 107 2 115 125 doi 10 1071 mu06041 S2CID 83564114 a b c d Corlett R T 1998 Frugivory and seed dispersal by vertebrates in the Oriental Indomalayan region Biological Reviews 73 4 413 448 doi 10 1111 j 1469 185x 1998 tb00178 x PMID 9951414 S2CID 23737628 a b c Crome F H J 1975 Breeding feeding and status of the Torres Strait pigeon at Low Isles North eastern Queensland Emu 75 4 189 198 doi 10 1080 01584197 1975 11797865 Banfield E J 1908 Confessions of a beachcomber on line Project Gutenberg Cade T J Willoughby E J MacLean G L 1996 Drinking behaviour of sandgrouse in the Namib and Kalahari deserts Africa The Auk 83 1 124 126 doi 10 2307 4082983 JSTOR 4082983 Holyoak D T 1979 Notes on the birds of Viti Levu and Taveuni Fiji Emu 79 7 18 doi 10 1071 mu9790007 a b Lambert F R 1989 Pigeons as seed predators and dispersers of figs in Malaysian lowland forest Ibis 131 4 521 527 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919x 1989 tb04788 x a b McConkey K R 2005 Seed dispersal by Pacific pigeons Ducula pacifica in Tonga Western Polynesia Emu 104 4 369 376 doi 10 1071 MU03060 S2CID 82155372 Diamond Jared 1973 Distributional ecology of New Guinea Birds Science 179 4075 759 769 Bibcode 1973Sci 179 759D doi 10 1126 science 179 4075 759 PMID 17806285 S2CID 27026183 a b Brarathi L Shenoy K B Hedge S N 1997 Biochemical differences between crop tissue and crop milk of pigeons Columba livia Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology 116A 51 55 doi 10 1016 s0300 9629 96 00116 8 Kocianova E Rehacek J Lisak V 1993 Transmission of antibodies to Chlamydia psittaci and Coxiella burnetti through eggs and crop milk in pigeons European Journal of Epidemiology 9 2 209 212 doi 10 1007 bf00158794 PMID 8519359 S2CID 19972365 a b c Holyoak D T Thibault J C 1978 Notes on the phylogeny distribution and ecology of frugiverous pigeons in Polynesia Emu 78 4 201 206 doi 10 1071 mu9780201 Steadman D W Storrs L O 1985 Bird remains from an archaeological site on Henderson Island South Pacific Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 82 18 6191 6195 doi 10 1073 pnas 82 18 6191 PMC 391018 PMID 16593606 Blackburn T M Cassey P Duncan R P Evans K L Gason K J 2005 Avian extinction and mammalian introductions on oceanic islands Science 305 5692 1955 1958 Bibcode 2004Sci 305 1955B doi 10 1126 science 1101617 PMID 15448269 S2CID 31211118 Thornton I W Compton S G Wilson C N 1996 The role of animals in the colonization of the Krakatau Islands by fig trees Ficus species Journal of Biogeography 23 4 577 592 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2699 1996 tb00019 x Read J L 2013 The birds of Tetapare Island Solomon Islands Australian Field Ornithology 30 67 78 External links edit nbsp Media related to Ducula at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from 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