fbpx
Wikipedia

European rock pipit

The European rock pipit (Anthus petrosus), or simply rock pipit, is a species of small passerine bird that breeds in western Europe on rocky coasts. It has streaked greyish-brown upperparts and buff underparts, and is similar in appearance to other European pipits. There are three subspecies, of which only the Fennoscandian one is migratory, wintering in shoreline habitats further south in Europe. The European rock pipit is territorial at least in the breeding season, and year-round where it is resident. Males will sometimes enter an adjacent territory to assist the resident in repelling an intruder, behaviour only otherwise known from the African fiddler crab.

European rock pipit
On Heligoland in the North Sea
Bird recorded in Pembrokeshire, Wales
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Motacillidae
Genus: Anthus
Species:
A. petrosus
Binomial name
Anthus petrosus
(Montagu, 1798)
  •    Breeding summer visitor
  •    Resident year-round
  •    Winter visitor
    (ranges are approximate)
Synonyms

Anthus spinoletta petrosus (Montagu, 1798)

European rock pipits construct a cup nest under coastal vegetation or in cliff crevices and lay four to six speckled pale grey eggs which hatch in about two weeks with a further 16 days to fledging. Although insects are occasionally caught in flight, the pipits feed mainly on small invertebrates picked off the rocks or from shallow water.

The European rock pipit may be hunted by birds of prey, infested by parasites such as fleas, or act as an involuntary host to the common cuckoo, but overall its population is large and stable, and it is therefore evaluated as a species of least concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).

Taxonomy and systematics

The family Motacillidae consists of the wagtails, pipits and longclaws. The largest of these groups is the pipits in the genus Anthus, which are typically brown-plumaged terrestrial insectivores. Their similar appearances have led to taxonomic problems; the water pipit and the buff-bellied pipit were considered subspecies of the European rock pipit until they were separated by the British Ornithologists' Union in 1998.[2] The European rock pipit is closely related to the meadow, red-throated and rosy pipits as well as its former subspecies.[3][4]

The first formal description naming this species was by English naturalist George Montagu in 1798.[5] It had previously been described in 1766 by Thomas Pennant, in the first edition of British Zoology, although he did not distinguish it from the common titlark (meadow pipit). It was first shown to be different from that species by John Walcott in the 1789 edition of his Synopsis of British Birds, in which he called it the sea lark. John Latham was the first to give the European rock pipit a scientific name, Alauda obscura in 1790, but the specimen he examined had been misidentified as to the species and was in fact a dusky lark. In the same year, Montagu, whom Latham had consulted about the bird, discovered the European rock pipit on the coast of South Wales, where it was known to some fishermen in the region as the "rock lark". He adopted that name for the species and gave it the scientific name Alauda petrosus.[5][6]

The scientific name of the European rock pipit is from Latin. Anthus is the name given by Pliny the Elder to a small bird of grasslands, and the specific petrosus means "rocky", from petrus, "rock".[7]

There are three recognised subspecies of the European rock pipit:[3]

Image Subspecies Distribution
  Anthus petrosus petrosus (Montagu, 1798) – the nominate subspecies breeds in Ireland, Great Britain, northwest France and the Channel Islands
  Anthus petrosus kleinschmidti (Hartert, 1905) breeds on the Faroe Islands, Shetland, Orkney, Fair Isle and St. Kilda
Anthus petrosus littoralis Brehm, 1823 breeds in Fennoscandia and northwestern Russia and winters on the west coast of Europe south to northwest Africa.

A. p. kleinschmidti is sometimes merged with the nominate form, A. p. petrosus. The suggested subspecies A. p. meinertzhageni on South Uist, A. p. hesperianus on the Isle of Arran, and A. p. ponens in northwestern France cannot be reliably separated from the nominate form. There is a geographical trend in appearance, with longer-billed, darker birds at the western end of the range, and shorter-billed, paler individuals in the east.[3]

Description

 
1907 illustration by Henrik Grønvold

The European rock pipit is 16.5–17 centimetres (6.5–6.7 in) long and weighs 18–32.5 grams (0.63–1.15 oz). The nominate race has smoky-olive upperparts, weakly streaked with darker brown, and buff underparts, heavily marked with poorly defined brown streaks. The legs, bill and iris are dark brown or blackish, and there is a pale eye-ring. The sexes are alike; although males average slightly brighter than females, the overlap is complete and birds cannot be sexed on appearance or measurements.[8] Immature birds resemble the adult, although they may sometimes be browner and more streaked above,[3] looking superficially similar to meadow pipits.[8]

Compared to the nominate form, A. p. kleinschmidti has slightly yellower, less olive, upperparts and brighter and yellower underparts between the breast streaking.[3] A. p. littoralis may show pinkish underparts and a pale supercilium (eyebrow) in summer, thereby resembling the water pipit. Vagrant European rock pipits in winter are readily distinguishable from water pipits, but very difficult to assign to subspecies by appearance or measurements. The western populations are known to be nearly sedentary, so east of the Elbe basin vagrant Eurasian rock pipits are presumably mostly littoralis.[9][10]

Adult European rock pipits have a complete moult in August–September, at which time juveniles replace their body and some wing covert feathers, giving them an appearance very like the adults. From late January to early March there is a partial moult and individually variable moult of some body and wing covert feathers, and sometimes the central tail feathers.[11]

The European rock pipit is closely related to the water pipit and the meadow pipit,[12] and is rather similar in appearance. Compared to the meadow pipit, the European rock pipit is darker, larger and longer-winged than its relative, and has dark, rather than pinkish-red, legs. The water pipit in winter plumage is also confusable with the European rock pipit, but has a strong supercilium and greyer upperparts; it is also typically much warier. The European rock pipit's dusky, rather than white, outer tail feathers are also a distinction from all its relatives.[13] The habitats used by European rock and water pipits are completely separate in the breeding season, and there is little overlap even when birds are not nesting.[8]

The European rock pipit's song is a sequence of about twenty tinkling cheepa notes followed by a rising series of thin gee calls, and finishing with a short trill.[14] The shrill pseep flight call is intermediate between the soft sip sip sip of the meadow pipit and the water pipit's short, thin fist.[13]

Distribution and habitat

 
On the rocky beaches of Norwick, Shetland

The European rock pipit is almost entirely coastal, frequenting rocky areas typically below 100 metres (330 ft), although on St Kilda it breeds at up to 400 metres (1,300 ft).[15] The European rock pipit is not troubled by wind or rain, although it avoids very exposed situations. It may occur further inland in winter or on migration.[3]

The breeding range is temperate and Arctic Europe on western and Baltic Sea coasts,[14] with a very small number sometimes nesting in Iceland.[15] The nominate race is largely resident, with only limited movement. A. p. kleinschmidti, which nests on the Faroe Islands and the Scottish islands, may move to sandy beaches or inland to rivers and lakes in winter. A. p. littoralis is largely migratory, wintering on coasts from southern Scandinavia to southwest Europe, with a few reaching Morocco. Wanderers have reached Spitsbergen and the Canary Islands, but records in Europe away from the coast are rare.[3] For example, a male shot at Dresden in 1894, now in the collection of the local State Museum of Zoology, is the sole specimen for Saxony.[9]

Migratory populations leave their breeding grounds in September and October, returning from March onwards, although in the far north they may not arrive before May.[15]

Behaviour

The European rock pipit is a much more approachable bird than the water pipit. If startled, it flies a fairly short distance, close to the ground, before it alights, whereas its relative is warier and flies some distance before landing again.[10] Eurasian rock pipits are usually solitary, only occasionally forming small flocks.[13]

Breeding

 
The bird lays four to six speckled pale grey eggs which hatch in about two weeks.

The European rock pipit is highly territorial in the breeding season, and throughout the year where it is resident. Breeding males have a song display in which they fly to 15–30 metres (49–98 ft) above the ground, then circle or descend to the ground with a fluttering "parachute" flight.[3] Territorial males will sometimes enter the territory of an adjacent male to cooperate in evicting an intruder. This behaviour, which requires the ability to distinguish the resident from the intruder, is only otherwise known from the African fiddler crab.[16][17]

Eggs are laid from early to mid-April in Britain and Ireland, from mid-May in southern Scandinavia, and from June in the north. The nest is always close to the shore, in a cliff crevice or hole, or under the cover of vegetation.[15] It is constructed by the female from seaweed and dead grass, and lined with finer fibres or hair.[14]

The clutch is four to six eggs, glossy pale grey with darker grey or olive speckles mainly at the wider end. They measure 21.6 by 16.0 millimetres (0.85 in × 0.63 in) and weigh 2.7 grams (0.095 oz),[a][14] of which 5% is shell.[18] They are incubated for 14–16 days to hatching, almost entirely by the female, although males have been recorded as occasionally helping.[14] The naked altricial chicks are brooded by the female and fledge in about 16 days.[15] Both parents may feed the chicks for several days after fledging.[3] There may be two broods in a year in the south of the pipit's range, and just one further north.[15]

In a British survey, a hatching rate of 82% and a fledging rate of 78% gave an overall 58% nesting success,[14] with an average 2.5 surviving young per pair. In contrast, a study in northwestern France found juvenile mortality was nearly 70%.[3] The average lifespan is not recorded,[18] although the maximum recorded age is 10.9 years.[19]

Feeding

The European rock pipit's feeding habitat is rocky coasts, rather than the damp grassland favoured by the water pipit.[13] The European rock pipit feeds mainly on invertebrates, seeking out most of its prey on foot, only occasionally flying to catch insects. It will venture into shallow water as it follows retreating waves,[15] and may take advantage of human activity that exposes sea slaters or other species that hide under stones.[14]

Food items include snails, worms, small crustaceans, flies and beetles. The proportions of each prey species vary with season and locality. Amphipod larvae are important in Ireland and Scotland, crustaceans in Norway, and the mollusc Assiminea grayana in the Netherlands.[3] Small fish are occasionally eaten, and in hard weather pipits may scavenge for other food, including human food litter. There is little competition from other species for food, since rocky beach specialists like the purple sandpiper take slightly larger food items, and may wade in deeper water. When food is abundant, meadow pipits may also feed on the shore, but are driven away by the European rock pipits when there is less prey available.[14]

Predators and parasites

The European rock pipit is hunted by birds of prey including the Eurasian sparrowhawk.[20][21] As with other members of its genus, it is a host of the common cuckoo, a brood parasite.[22] Eggs laid by cuckoos that specialise in using pipits as their hosts are similar in appearance to those of the pipit.[23]

The European rock pipit is also a host to the flea Ceratophyllus borealis,[24] and several other flea species in the genera Ceratophyllus and Dasypsyllus.[25] The Eurasian rock pipit can benefit from parasitism of the common periwinkle Littorina littoria by the castrating trematode Parorchis acanthus. Beaches can become attractive where the decline of the periwinkle results in more ungrazed algae, with corresponding increases in invertebrates and a greater diversity of smaller Littorina snails as food for the pipits.[26]

Status

Estimates of the breeding population of the European rock pipit vary,[1] but may be as high as 408,000 pairs, of which around 300,000 pairs are in Norway. Despite slight declines in the British population and some range expansion in Finland, the population is considered overall to be large and stable,[3] and for this reason it is evaluated as a species of least concern by the IUCN.[1]

Breeding densities vary from 0.9–6 pairs/km (1.4–9.7 pairs/mi) of coast depending on the quality of the habitat. There are few threats, although oil spills can temporarily reduce the invertebrate population of affected rocky coasts.[3]

Notes

  1. ^ For A. p. petrosus and A. p. littoralis. A. p. kleinschmidti is fractionally larger at 22.2 by 16.1 millimetres (0.87 in × 0.63 in).[14]

References

  1. ^ a b c BirdLife International (2018). "Anthus petrosus". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T22718567A131987689. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T22718567A131987689.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ Tyler, Stephanie (2004). "Family Motacillidae (Pipits and Wagtails)". In del Hoyo, J.; Elliott, A.; Christie, D.A. (eds.). Handbook of the Birds of the World. Vol. 9: Cotingas to Pipits and Wagtails. Barcelona, Spain: Lynx Edicions. pp. 686–743. ISBN 978-84-87334-69-6.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Tyler, Stephanie (2020). del Hoyo, Josep; Elliott, Andrew; Sargatal, Jordi; Christie, David A.; de Juana, Eduardo (eds.). "Rock Pipit (Anthus petrosus)". Birds of the World. Ithaca, NY, US: Cornell Lab of Ornithology. doi:10.2173/bow.rocpip1.01. S2CID 216195668.
  4. ^ Voelker, Gary (1999). "Molecular evolutionary relationships in the Avian genus Anthus (Pipits: Motacillidae)". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 11 (1): 84–94. doi:10.1006/mpev.1998.0555. PMID 10082613.
  5. ^ a b Montagu, George (1798). "Alauda Petrosus—Rock Lark". Transactions of the Linnean Society of London. 4: 41.
  6. ^ Yarrell, William; Newton, Alfred (1871–1874). A History of British Birds. Vol. 1 (4th ed.). London: John Van Vorst. pp. 586–591.
  7. ^ Jobling, James A. (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 49, 300. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  8. ^ a b c Alström, Per; Mild, Krister (2003). Pipits and Wagtails of Europe, Asia and North America. Identification and Systematics (Helm Identification Guides). London: Christopher Helm. pp. 164–169. ISBN 978-0-7136-5834-7.
  9. ^ a b Töpfer, Till (2008). "Nachweise seltener Vogeltaxa (Aves) in Sachsen aus der ornithologischen Sammlung des Museums für Tierkunde Dresden" [Records of rare bird taxa (Aves) in Saxony from the ornithological collection of the Zoological Museum Dresden]. Faunistische Abhandlungen (in German). 26 (3): 63–101. ISSN 0375-2135.
  10. ^ a b Bijlsma, R J (1977). "Voorkomen en oecologie van Anthus spinoletta spinoletta en A. s. littoralis in de uiterwaarden van de Rijn bij Wageningen" [Distribution and ecology of A. spinoletta and A. s. littoralis in the Rhine floodplain at Wageningen]. Limosa (in Dutch). 50 (3–4): 127–136. ISSN 0024-3620.
  11. ^ Williamson, Kenneth (1965). (PDF). British Birds. 58 (12): 493–504. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 January 2017. Retrieved 17 October 2016.
  12. ^ Voelker, Gary (1999). "Molecular evolutionary relationships in the Avian genus Anthus (Pipits: Motacillidae)". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 11 (1): 84–94. doi:10.1006/mpev.1998.0555. PMID 10082613.
  13. ^ a b c d Harris, Alan; Vinicombe, Keith; Tucker, Laurel (1989). The Macmillan Field Guide to Bird Identification. Macmillan field guides. London: Macmillan. pp. 159–161. ISBN 978-0-333-42773-6.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i Simms, Eric (1992). British Larks, Pipits and Wagtails. New Naturalist. London: Harper Collins. pp. 153–165. ISBN 978-0-00-219870-7.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g Snow, David; Perrins, Christopher M, eds. (1998). The Birds of the Western Palearctic concise edition (2 volumes). Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 1088–1092. ISBN 978-0-19-854099-1.
  16. ^ Detto, Tanya; Jennions, Michael D; Backwell, Patricia R Y (2010). "When and Why Do Territorial Coalitions Occur? Experimental Evidence from a Fiddler Crab". The American Naturalist. 175 (5): E119–E125. doi:10.1086/651588. JSTOR 651588. PMID 20302425. S2CID 44135001.
  17. ^ Elfström, S T (1997). "Fighting behavior and strategy of rock pipit, Anthus petrosus, neighbors: cooperative defense". Animal Behaviour. 54 (3): 535–542. doi:10.1006/anbe.1996.0492. PMID 9299039. S2CID 53152258.
  18. ^ a b "Rock Pipit Anthus petrosus [Montagu, 1798]". British Trust for Ornithology. 16 July 2010. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  19. ^ Fransson, T; Kolehmainen, T; Kroon, C; Jansson, L; Wenninger, T. "EURING list of longevity records for European birds". EURING. Retrieved 8 October 2016.
  20. ^ Newton, Ian (2010) [1986]. The Sparrowhawk (Poyser monographs). London: Poyser. p. 368. ISBN 978-1-4081-3834-2.
  21. ^ Somerset Ornithological Society (1994). Annual report. Vol. 80. Chard, Somerset: Somerset Ornithological Society. p. 34.
  22. ^ Rose, Laurence N (1982). "Breeding ecology of British pipits and their Cuckoo parasite". Bird Study. 29: 27–40. doi:10.1080/00063658209476735.
  23. ^ Soler, Juan J; Vivaldi, Manuel Martín; Møller, Anders P (2009). "Geographic distribution of suitable hosts explains the evolution of specialized gentes in the European cuckoo Cuculus canorus". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 9 (88): 1–10. doi:10.1186/1471-2148-9-88. PMC 2683792. PMID 19405966.
  24. ^ Rothschild, Miriam; Clay, Theresa (1953). Fleas, Flukes and Cuckoos. A study of bird parasites. London: Collins. pp. 66, 111.
  25. ^ "Distribution of British fleas: Rock pipit". Natural History Museum. Retrieved 9 October 2016.
  26. ^ Poulin, R (2004). Parasites in Marine System. Parasitology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 8110–8111. ISBN 978-0-521-53412-3.

External links

  • Xeno-canto: audio recordings of the European rock pipit

european, rock, pipit, anthus, petrosus, simply, rock, pipit, species, small, passerine, bird, that, breeds, western, europe, rocky, coasts, streaked, greyish, brown, upperparts, buff, underparts, similar, appearance, other, european, pipits, there, three, sub. The European rock pipit Anthus petrosus or simply rock pipit is a species of small passerine bird that breeds in western Europe on rocky coasts It has streaked greyish brown upperparts and buff underparts and is similar in appearance to other European pipits There are three subspecies of which only the Fennoscandian one is migratory wintering in shoreline habitats further south in Europe The European rock pipit is territorial at least in the breeding season and year round where it is resident Males will sometimes enter an adjacent territory to assist the resident in repelling an intruder behaviour only otherwise known from the African fiddler crab European rock pipit On Heligoland in the North Sea source source Bird recorded in Pembrokeshire Wales Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Passeriformes Family Motacillidae Genus Anthus Species A petrosus Binomial name Anthus petrosus Montagu 1798 Breeding summer visitor Resident year round Winter visitor ranges are approximate Synonyms Anthus spinoletta petrosus Montagu 1798 European rock pipits construct a cup nest under coastal vegetation or in cliff crevices and lay four to six speckled pale grey eggs which hatch in about two weeks with a further 16 days to fledging Although insects are occasionally caught in flight the pipits feed mainly on small invertebrates picked off the rocks or from shallow water The European rock pipit may be hunted by birds of prey infested by parasites such as fleas or act as an involuntary host to the common cuckoo but overall its population is large and stable and it is therefore evaluated as a species of least concern by the International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN Contents 1 Taxonomy and systematics 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour 4 1 Breeding 4 2 Feeding 5 Predators and parasites 6 Status 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksTaxonomy and systematicsThe family Motacillidae consists of the wagtails pipits and longclaws The largest of these groups is the pipits in the genus Anthus which are typically brown plumaged terrestrial insectivores Their similar appearances have led to taxonomic problems the water pipit and the buff bellied pipit were considered subspecies of the European rock pipit until they were separated by the British Ornithologists Union in 1998 2 The European rock pipit is closely related to the meadow red throated and rosy pipits as well as its former subspecies 3 4 The first formal description naming this species was by English naturalist George Montagu in 1798 5 It had previously been described in 1766 by Thomas Pennant in the first edition of British Zoology although he did not distinguish it from the common titlark meadow pipit It was first shown to be different from that species by John Walcott in the 1789 edition of his Synopsis of British Birds in which he called it the sea lark John Latham was the first to give the European rock pipit a scientific name Alauda obscura in 1790 but the specimen he examined had been misidentified as to the species and was in fact a dusky lark In the same year Montagu whom Latham had consulted about the bird discovered the European rock pipit on the coast of South Wales where it was known to some fishermen in the region as the rock lark He adopted that name for the species and gave it the scientific name Alauda petrosus 5 6 The scientific name of the European rock pipit is from Latin Anthus is the name given by Pliny the Elder to a small bird of grasslands and the specific petrosus means rocky from petrus rock 7 There are three recognised subspecies of the European rock pipit 3 Image Subspecies Distribution nbsp Anthus petrosus petrosus Montagu 1798 the nominate subspecies breeds in Ireland Great Britain northwest France and the Channel Islands nbsp Anthus petrosus kleinschmidti Hartert 1905 breeds on the Faroe Islands Shetland Orkney Fair Isle and St Kilda Anthus petrosus littoralis Brehm 1823 breeds in Fennoscandia and northwestern Russia and winters on the west coast of Europe south to northwest Africa A p kleinschmidti is sometimes merged with the nominate form A p petrosus The suggested subspecies A p meinertzhageni on South Uist A p hesperianus on the Isle of Arran and A p ponens in northwestern France cannot be reliably separated from the nominate form There is a geographical trend in appearance with longer billed darker birds at the western end of the range and shorter billed paler individuals in the east 3 Description nbsp 1907 illustration by Henrik Gronvold The European rock pipit is 16 5 17 centimetres 6 5 6 7 in long and weighs 18 32 5 grams 0 63 1 15 oz The nominate race has smoky olive upperparts weakly streaked with darker brown and buff underparts heavily marked with poorly defined brown streaks The legs bill and iris are dark brown or blackish and there is a pale eye ring The sexes are alike although males average slightly brighter than females the overlap is complete and birds cannot be sexed on appearance or measurements 8 Immature birds resemble the adult although they may sometimes be browner and more streaked above 3 looking superficially similar to meadow pipits 8 Compared to the nominate form A p kleinschmidti has slightly yellower less olive upperparts and brighter and yellower underparts between the breast streaking 3 A p littoralis may show pinkish underparts and a pale supercilium eyebrow in summer thereby resembling the water pipit Vagrant European rock pipits in winter are readily distinguishable from water pipits but very difficult to assign to subspecies by appearance or measurements The western populations are known to be nearly sedentary so east of the Elbe basin vagrant Eurasian rock pipits are presumably mostly littoralis 9 10 Adult European rock pipits have a complete moult in August September at which time juveniles replace their body and some wing covert feathers giving them an appearance very like the adults From late January to early March there is a partial moult and individually variable moult of some body and wing covert feathers and sometimes the central tail feathers 11 The European rock pipit is closely related to the water pipit and the meadow pipit 12 and is rather similar in appearance Compared to the meadow pipit the European rock pipit is darker larger and longer winged than its relative and has dark rather than pinkish red legs The water pipit in winter plumage is also confusable with the European rock pipit but has a strong supercilium and greyer upperparts it is also typically much warier The European rock pipit s dusky rather than white outer tail feathers are also a distinction from all its relatives 13 The habitats used by European rock and water pipits are completely separate in the breeding season and there is little overlap even when birds are not nesting 8 The European rock pipit s song is a sequence of about twenty tinkling cheepa notes followed by a rising series of thin gee calls and finishing with a short trill 14 The shrill pseep flight call is intermediate between the soft sip sip sip of the meadow pipit and the water pipit s short thin fist 13 Distribution and habitat nbsp On the rocky beaches of Norwick Shetland The European rock pipit is almost entirely coastal frequenting rocky areas typically below 100 metres 330 ft although on St Kilda it breeds at up to 400 metres 1 300 ft 15 The European rock pipit is not troubled by wind or rain although it avoids very exposed situations It may occur further inland in winter or on migration 3 The breeding range is temperate and Arctic Europe on western and Baltic Sea coasts 14 with a very small number sometimes nesting in Iceland 15 The nominate race is largely resident with only limited movement A p kleinschmidti which nests on the Faroe Islands and the Scottish islands may move to sandy beaches or inland to rivers and lakes in winter A p littoralis is largely migratory wintering on coasts from southern Scandinavia to southwest Europe with a few reaching Morocco Wanderers have reached Spitsbergen and the Canary Islands but records in Europe away from the coast are rare 3 For example a male shot at Dresden in 1894 now in the collection of the local State Museum of Zoology is the sole specimen for Saxony 9 Migratory populations leave their breeding grounds in September and October returning from March onwards although in the far north they may not arrive before May 15 BehaviourThe European rock pipit is a much more approachable bird than the water pipit If startled it flies a fairly short distance close to the ground before it alights whereas its relative is warier and flies some distance before landing again 10 Eurasian rock pipits are usually solitary only occasionally forming small flocks 13 nbsp A p kleinschmidti on Suduroy Faroe Islands nbsp Anthus petrosus on Ringstead Bay nbsp Anthus petrosus on Swanage Breeding nbsp The bird lays four to six speckled pale grey eggs which hatch in about two weeks The European rock pipit is highly territorial in the breeding season and throughout the year where it is resident Breeding males have a song display in which they fly to 15 30 metres 49 98 ft above the ground then circle or descend to the ground with a fluttering parachute flight 3 Territorial males will sometimes enter the territory of an adjacent male to cooperate in evicting an intruder This behaviour which requires the ability to distinguish the resident from the intruder is only otherwise known from the African fiddler crab 16 17 Eggs are laid from early to mid April in Britain and Ireland from mid May in southern Scandinavia and from June in the north The nest is always close to the shore in a cliff crevice or hole or under the cover of vegetation 15 It is constructed by the female from seaweed and dead grass and lined with finer fibres or hair 14 The clutch is four to six eggs glossy pale grey with darker grey or olive speckles mainly at the wider end They measure 21 6 by 16 0 millimetres 0 85 in 0 63 in and weigh 2 7 grams 0 095 oz a 14 of which 5 is shell 18 They are incubated for 14 16 days to hatching almost entirely by the female although males have been recorded as occasionally helping 14 The naked altricial chicks are brooded by the female and fledge in about 16 days 15 Both parents may feed the chicks for several days after fledging 3 There may be two broods in a year in the south of the pipit s range and just one further north 15 In a British survey a hatching rate of 82 and a fledging rate of 78 gave an overall 58 nesting success 14 with an average 2 5 surviving young per pair In contrast a study in northwestern France found juvenile mortality was nearly 70 3 The average lifespan is not recorded 18 although the maximum recorded age is 10 9 years 19 Feeding The European rock pipit s feeding habitat is rocky coasts rather than the damp grassland favoured by the water pipit 13 The European rock pipit feeds mainly on invertebrates seeking out most of its prey on foot only occasionally flying to catch insects It will venture into shallow water as it follows retreating waves 15 and may take advantage of human activity that exposes sea slaters or other species that hide under stones 14 Food items include snails worms small crustaceans flies and beetles The proportions of each prey species vary with season and locality Amphipod larvae are important in Ireland and Scotland crustaceans in Norway and the mollusc Assiminea grayana in the Netherlands 3 Small fish are occasionally eaten and in hard weather pipits may scavenge for other food including human food litter There is little competition from other species for food since rocky beach specialists like the purple sandpiper take slightly larger food items and may wade in deeper water When food is abundant meadow pipits may also feed on the shore but are driven away by the European rock pipits when there is less prey available 14 Predators and parasitesThe European rock pipit is hunted by birds of prey including the Eurasian sparrowhawk 20 21 As with other members of its genus it is a host of the common cuckoo a brood parasite 22 Eggs laid by cuckoos that specialise in using pipits as their hosts are similar in appearance to those of the pipit 23 The European rock pipit is also a host to the flea Ceratophyllus borealis 24 and several other flea species in the genera Ceratophyllus and Dasypsyllus 25 The Eurasian rock pipit can benefit from parasitism of the common periwinkle Littorina littoria by the castrating trematode Parorchis acanthus Beaches can become attractive where the decline of the periwinkle results in more ungrazed algae with corresponding increases in invertebrates and a greater diversity of smaller Littorina snails as food for the pipits 26 StatusEstimates of the breeding population of the European rock pipit vary 1 but may be as high as 408 000 pairs of which around 300 000 pairs are in Norway Despite slight declines in the British population and some range expansion in Finland the population is considered overall to be large and stable 3 and for this reason it is evaluated as a species of least concern by the IUCN 1 Breeding densities vary from 0 9 6 pairs km 1 4 9 7 pairs mi of coast depending on the quality of the habitat There are few threats although oil spills can temporarily reduce the invertebrate population of affected rocky coasts 3 Notes For A p petrosus and A p littoralis A p kleinschmidti is fractionally larger at 22 2 by 16 1 millimetres 0 87 in 0 63 in 14 References a b c BirdLife International 2018 Anthus petrosus IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T22718567A131987689 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T22718567A131987689 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Tyler Stephanie 2004 Family Motacillidae Pipits and Wagtails In del Hoyo J Elliott A Christie D A eds Handbook of the Birds of the World Vol 9 Cotingas to Pipits and Wagtails Barcelona Spain Lynx Edicions pp 686 743 ISBN 978 84 87334 69 6 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Tyler Stephanie 2020 del Hoyo Josep Elliott Andrew Sargatal Jordi Christie David A de Juana Eduardo eds Rock Pipit Anthus petrosus Birds of the World Ithaca NY US Cornell Lab of Ornithology doi 10 2173 bow rocpip1 01 S2CID 216195668 Voelker Gary 1999 Molecular evolutionary relationships in the Avian genus Anthus Pipits Motacillidae Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 11 1 84 94 doi 10 1006 mpev 1998 0555 PMID 10082613 a b Montagu George 1798 Alauda Petrosus Rock Lark Transactions of the Linnean Society of London 4 41 Yarrell William Newton Alfred 1871 1874 A History of British Birds Vol 1 4th ed London John Van Vorst pp 586 591 Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm pp 49 300 ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 a b c Alstrom Per Mild Krister 2003 Pipits and Wagtails of Europe Asia and North America Identification and Systematics Helm Identification Guides London Christopher Helm pp 164 169 ISBN 978 0 7136 5834 7 a b Topfer Till 2008 Nachweise seltener Vogeltaxa Aves in Sachsen aus der ornithologischen Sammlung des Museums fur Tierkunde Dresden Records of rare bird taxa Aves in Saxony from the ornithological collection of the Zoological Museum Dresden Faunistische Abhandlungen in German 26 3 63 101 ISSN 0375 2135 a b Bijlsma R J 1977 Voorkomen en oecologie van Anthus spinoletta spinoletta en A s littoralis in de uiterwaarden van de Rijn bij Wageningen Distribution and ecology of A spinoletta and A s littoralis in the Rhine floodplain at Wageningen Limosa in Dutch 50 3 4 127 136 ISSN 0024 3620 Williamson Kenneth 1965 Moult and its relation to taxonomy in Rock and Water Pipits PDF British Birds 58 12 493 504 Archived from the original PDF on 23 January 2017 Retrieved 17 October 2016 Voelker Gary 1999 Molecular evolutionary relationships in the Avian genus Anthus Pipits Motacillidae Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 11 1 84 94 doi 10 1006 mpev 1998 0555 PMID 10082613 a b c d Harris Alan Vinicombe Keith Tucker Laurel 1989 The Macmillan Field Guide to Bird Identification Macmillan field guides London Macmillan pp 159 161 ISBN 978 0 333 42773 6 a b c d e f g h i Simms Eric 1992 British Larks Pipits and Wagtails New Naturalist London Harper Collins pp 153 165 ISBN 978 0 00 219870 7 a b c d e f g Snow David Perrins Christopher M eds 1998 The Birds of the Western Palearctic concise edition 2 volumes Oxford Oxford University Press pp 1088 1092 ISBN 978 0 19 854099 1 Detto Tanya Jennions Michael D Backwell Patricia R Y 2010 When and Why Do Territorial Coalitions Occur Experimental Evidence from a Fiddler Crab The American Naturalist 175 5 E119 E125 doi 10 1086 651588 JSTOR 651588 PMID 20302425 S2CID 44135001 Elfstrom S T 1997 Fighting behavior and strategy of rock pipit Anthus petrosus neighbors cooperative defense Animal Behaviour 54 3 535 542 doi 10 1006 anbe 1996 0492 PMID 9299039 S2CID 53152258 a b Rock Pipit Anthus petrosus Montagu 1798 British Trust for Ornithology 16 July 2010 Retrieved 8 October 2016 Fransson T Kolehmainen T Kroon C Jansson L Wenninger T EURING list of longevity records for European birds EURING Retrieved 8 October 2016 Newton Ian 2010 1986 The Sparrowhawk Poyser monographs London Poyser p 368 ISBN 978 1 4081 3834 2 Somerset Ornithological Society 1994 Annual report Vol 80 Chard Somerset Somerset Ornithological Society p 34 Rose Laurence N 1982 Breeding ecology of British pipits and their Cuckoo parasite Bird Study 29 27 40 doi 10 1080 00063658209476735 Soler Juan J Vivaldi Manuel Martin Moller Anders P 2009 Geographic distribution of suitable hosts explains the evolution of specialized gentes in the European cuckoo Cuculus canorus BMC Evolutionary Biology 9 88 1 10 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 9 88 PMC 2683792 PMID 19405966 Rothschild Miriam Clay Theresa 1953 Fleas Flukes and Cuckoos A study of bird parasites London Collins pp 66 111 Distribution of British fleas Rock pipit Natural History Museum Retrieved 9 October 2016 Poulin R 2004 Parasites in Marine System Parasitology Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 8110 8111 ISBN 978 0 521 53412 3 External links nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Anthus petrosus Xeno canto audio recordings of the European rock pipit Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title European rock pipit amp oldid 1214742098, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.