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Red-tailed tropicbird

The red-tailed tropicbird (Phaethon rubricauda) is a seabird native to tropical parts of the Indian and Pacific Oceans. One of three closely related species of tropicbird (Phaethontidae), it was described by Pieter Boddaert in 1783. Superficially resembling a tern in appearance, it has almost all-white plumage with a black mask and a red bill. The sexes have similar plumage. As referenced in the common name, adults have red tail streamers that are about twice their body length. Four subspecies are recognised, but there is evidence of clinal variation in body size—with smaller birds in the north and larger in the south—and hence no grounds for subspecies.

Red-tailed tropicbird
In flight, Kilauea Point, Kauai, Hawaii
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Clade: Dinosauria
Class: Aves
Order: Phaethontiformes
Family: Phaethontidae
Genus: Phaethon
Species:
P. rubricauda
Binomial name
Phaethon rubricauda
Boddaert, 1783
Range (in pink)
Synonyms[2]

Phaethon phoenicuros Gmelin 1789
Phaëthon novae-hollandiae Brandt, 1840

The red-tailed tropicbird eats fish—mainly flying fish and squid—after catching them by plunge-diving into the ocean. Nesting takes place in loose colonies on oceanic islands; the nest itself is a scrape found on a cliff face, in a crevice, or on a sandy beach. A single egg is laid, then is incubated by both sexes for about six weeks. The parents make long food-foraging trips of about 150 hours during incubation, but once the chick has hatched, the parents specialize their foraging: one forages for the chick for a few hours at a time, while the other makes much longer trips to feed themselves.

This bird is considered to be a least-concern species according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), though it is adversely affected by human contact. Rats and feral cats prey on eggs and young at nesting sites. The bird's tail streamers were once prized by some Hawaiian and Maori peoples.

Taxonomy Edit

The British naturalist Sir Joseph Banks encountered the red-tailed tropicbird on the Pacific Ocean in March 1769 on James Cook's first voyage, noting that it was a different species to the familiar red-billed tropicbird. He gave it the name Phaeton erubescens.[3] It was the French polymath Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon who formally described the species in his Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux in 1781, noting it was a native of Isle de France (Mauritius).[4] The bird was also illustrated in a hand-coloured plate engraved by François-Nicolas Martinet in the Planches Enluminées D'Histoire Naturelle which was produced under the supervision of Edme-Louis Daubenton to accompany Buffon's text.[5] Buffon did not include a scientific name with his description but in 1783 the Dutch naturalist Pieter Boddaert coined the binomial name Phaethon rubricauda in his catalogue of the Planches Enluminées.[6] The genus name is derived from Ancient Greek phaethon, "sun", while the species epithet comes from the Latin words ruber "red" and cauda "tail".[7] English ornithologist John Latham wrote about the red-tailed tropicbird in 1785 in his General Synopsis of Birds, recording it as common in Mauritius and the South Pacific. He also reported a black-billed tropicbird collected from Palmerston Island that ended up in Banks' collection.[8] Latham did not give them binomial names, however. It was left to German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin to describe the species, which he did as Phaeton phoenicuros and P. melanorhynchos respectively in the 13th edition of Systema Naturae in 1788.[9] Latham later described this black-billed specimen as the New Holland tropicbird,[10] giving it the name Phaethon novae-hollandiae.[11]

The British naturalist Walter Rothschild reviewed the described names and specimens in 1900 and concluded that the original use of P. erubescens was a nomen nudum. He concluded that the populations of Lord Howe, Norfolk and Kermadec Islands belonged to a distinct subspecies which he named P. rubicauda erubescens, due to their larger overall size, more robust bill and prominent reddish tinge to their plumage. He also classified P. melanorhynchus and P. novae-hollandiae as juveniles.[11] The Australian amateur ornithologist Gregory Mathews then applied the name P. rubicauda roseotinctus to Rothschild's P. rubicauda erubescens.[12]

"Red-tailed tropicbird" has been designated the official name by the International Ornithologists' Union (IOC).[13] Other common names include red-tailed bos'nbird or silver bos'nbird, the names derived from the semblance of the tail feathers to a boatswain's marlin spikes, and strawtail.[7] The New Zealand Māori call it amokura,[14] and the native Hawaiians koaʻe ʻula.[15]

Its closest relative is the white-tailed tropicbird (P. lepturus), the split between their ancestors taking place about four million years ago.[16]

Four subspecies are recognised by the IOC:[13]

  • P. r. rubricauda Boddaert, 1783 the nominate subspecies, from the western Indian Ocean. Subsequent specimens from the Cocos (Keeling) Islands were allocated to this taxon.[17]
  • P. r. westralis Mathews, 1912 from the eastern Indian Ocean. Mathews described it as separate on account of its larger wings.[18] More extensive analysis in 1989 showed that the wing and beak size overlap between this and the nominate subspecies, leaving intensity of colour as the only distinguishing feature.[17]
  • P. r. roseotinctus Mathews, 1926 from the southwestern Pacific Ocean, including populations on Kermadec, Lord Howe, Norfolk and Raine Islands.[17]
  • P. r. melanorhynchos Gmelin, 1789 from the western, central and southern Pacific Ocean, including populations on the Cook Islands, Tonga, Samoa, the Marquesas and the Society Islands.[17]

The ornithologist Mike Tarburton reviewed the known subspecies in 1989 and concluded that none were valid, noting that there was a clinal change in size in the species: those from Kure Atoll in the North Pacific being the smallest; ranging to those from the Kermadec Islands in the South Pacific being the largest. He also noted that the pink colouration was more intense in new plumage and faded after a few years in museum specimens.[17]

Description Edit

 
Closeup of head showing comma-shaped markings

The red-tailed tropicbird measures 95 to 104 cm (37 to 41 in) on average, which includes the 35 cm (14 in) tail streamers, and weighs around 800 g (30 oz). It has a wingspan of 111 to 119 cm (44 to 47 in). It has a streamlined but solid build with almost all-white plumage,[7] often with a pink tinge.[19] The sexes are similar in plumage.[7] A dark brown comma-shaped stripe extends back from the lores, through and over the eyes and reaching the ear coverts.[19] The iris is dark brown.[20] The bill is bright red, slightly paler at the base and black around the nostrils. The legs and base of the toes are pale blue-mauve, while the webbing and rest of the toes are black.[20] The white feathers of the head and rump have concealed dark brown bases, while those of the mantle, back, tail rectrices and tail coverts have dark brown shaft bases. The two long tail feathers are orange or red with white bases for around a tenth of their length,[21] and can be hard to see when the bird is flying. The white wings are marked by dark chevron-shaped patches on the tertials, and the dark shafts of the primary flight feathers are visible.[19] The pink tinge is often more pronounced in the remiges of the upper wing.[21] Moulting takes place outside the breeding season, the streamers being replaced before the rest of the feathers. Streamers are replaced at any time, one growing while the other is shed, and old streamers may litter the area around a breeding colony.[20]

Newly hatched chicks are covered in thin, long, grey-white down, which is paler on the head. The lores are bare. The down is greyer in older chicks. The primaries, rectrices and scapulars are evident in the third week, and chicks are mostly feathered with residual down on underparts and under the wings after six weeks, and fully feathered by 11 weeks.[21] Juvenile birds have a glossy white forehead, chin, throat and underparts,[20] and prominent black barring and scaling on their crown, nape, mantle, back, rump and upper wing coverts.[19] Their bills are blackish grey with a light blue-grey base, and grey legs and feet.[20]

In Australian waters the red-tailed tropicbird could be confused with the silver gull (Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae) or various tern species, though it is larger and heavier-set, with a wedge-shaped tail. Its red bill and more wholly white wings distinguish it from the adult white-tailed tropicbird. Immature red-tailed tropicbirds likewise can be distinguished from immature white-tailed tropicbirds by their partly red rather than yellow bills.[19]

The red-tailed tropicbird is generally silent while flying. Aside from during courtship displays, birds may give a short greeting squawk to their mate when arriving or leaving the nest. Birds give a low growling call as a defence call, and young chatter repetitively as a begging call—made whenever the parents are nearby.[22]

Distribution and habitat Edit

The red-tailed tropicbird ranges across the southern Indian, and western and central Pacific Oceans, from the East African coast to Indonesia, the waters around the southern reaches of Japan, across to Chile,[23] and the Hawaiian Islands, where they are more common on the northwestern islands.[24] It frequents areas of ocean with water temperatures from 24 to 30 °C (75 to 86 °F) and salinity under 35% in the southern hemisphere and 33.5% in the northern hemisphere. In the Pacific Ocean, the southern boundary of its range runs along the 22 °C (72 °F) summer surface isotherm.[19]

The birds disperse widely after breeding. Evidence suggests birds in the Indian Ocean follow prevailing winds westwards, young individuals banded in Sumatra and Sugarloaf Rock, Western Australia, being recovered at Mauritius and Réunion respectively.[25] Banding on Kure Atoll suggests birds in the North Pacific disperse in an easterly direction, following prevailing winds there.[26] Strong winds can blow them inland on occasions, which explains some sighting records away from the coast and their preferred habitats.[7]

Johnston Atoll It is the world's largest colony of red-tailed tropicbirds, with 10,800 nests in 2020.[27] In the Pacific area, it nests on the Australian offshore territories of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands, and on Queensland's coral islands (including Raine Island and Lady Elliot Island).[28] In mid-2020 Australian scientists found a bird on Lady Elliott Island that they had banded 23 years earlier as a chick, but had not seen since, which had come back to breed on the island.[29] In New Zealand territory it breeds on the Kermadec Islands.[28] Elsewhere in the Pacific it breeds in Fiji, New Caledonia, French Polynesia, Hawaii[23]—with a large colony on Kure Atoll[26]—the Cook Islands, Pitcairn Island, and islands off Japan and Chile.[23]

There are large breeding colonies on Europa,[30] Aldabra[31] and Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean, with smaller colonies in Madagascar, where it nests on the tiny island of Nosy Ve,[32] the Seychelles, and Mauritius.[23] It is also found on the Australian territory of Cocos (Keeling) Islands in the Indian Ocean.[28] The warm waters of the Leeuwin Current facilitate the species nesting at Cape Leeuwin in southwestern Australia, yet is only a rare visitor to New South Wales at corresponding latitudes on the Australian east coast.[19] It also nests at Ashmore Reef and Rottnest Island off Western Australia, as well as Sugarloaf Rock at Cape Naturaliste and Busselton on the Western Australian coastline itself.[28]

It is an occasional visitor to Palau, breeding being recorded from the Southwest Islands,[33] and was first recorded from Guam in 1992.[34] It is an uncommon vagrant to New Zealand proper, where it has been recorded from the northern reaches of North Island, especially Three Kings Islands.[2] It is a very rare vagrant to North America, with records from California and Vancouver Island.[35]

Behaviour Edit

The red-tailed tropicbird is a strong flyer, and walks on land with difficulty using a shuffling gait.[7]

Courtship displays consist of flying backwards, vertical displays and circles. [36]

Breeding Edit

 
P. r. rubricuada nesting on Nosy Ve

The red-tailed tropicbird is thought to be monogamous,[29] pairs remaining bonded over successive breeding seasons, although such information as age at first breeding and pair-formation is not known.[37] It nests in loose colonies,[38] on offshore islands and stacks, rocky cliffs, coral atolls and cays. It rarely nests on large bodies of land, though has done so in southern Western Australia.[19] The nest itself is a shallow scrape, in either shaded sand[39] or a rocky crevice,[38] or under a shrub. Because the red-tailed tropicbird does not walk well, it lands by flying into the wind, stalling and dropping to the ground. The nest is often located within one metre (3.3 ft) of the edge of the shrub (or other shaded area) to minimise walking distance. The tropicbird often chooses shrubs with fewer stems for accessibility.[40]

 
Nesting and sheltering chick under its wing
 
Egg
 
Young chick with down
 
Young bird on Nosy Ve, Madagascar

The species is territorial to a degree, aggressively defending the nest site and pecking radius around it, commencing around three months before breeding.[37] Birds are more aggressive at crowded colonies, where numbers are large or suitable nest sites less common. They adopt a defence posture, which consists of raising the humeri up and bringing the wrists together, drawing the neck into the body and shaking the head sideways, fluffing up the head feathers and squawking. Bill-jabbing and fights can break out, the two combatants locking bills and wrestling for up to 90 minutes.[41]

Mate choice is likely to be based partially on the length of the tail streamers, a bird having longer tail streamers being more attractive as a mate. This tropicbird also probably mates assortatively for tail streamer length, meaning mates likely have streamers of about equal length.[42]

In the leadup to breeding, males initiate an aerial courtship display of flying in large circles, alternating between gliding, short periods of rapid wing-beating, and low flight within a few metres of the water, while making sharp cackling calls. Initially flying in small groups, birds then pair off to repeat the display in pairs before bonding. Once pairs have established a nest, they do not perform the display.[41]

The timing of breeding depends on location; in some places, birds breed in a defined breeding season, whereas in others, there is none. South of the equator, the latter is likely to be true. On islands near the equator, laying usually occurs from June to November, the majority of chicks fledging around January to February.[38] On Christmas Island, breeding takes place at different times on different parts of the island due to prevailing weather conditions.[22] Some birds may remain at the breeding site year-round.[41] On sub-tropical Lady Elliott Island off Queensland, they nest in winter, which scientists think may be timed to avoid the common breeding times of most migratory species of seabird, such as the noisy Wedge-tailed Shearwater (mutton bird). Not much is yet known about their habits though.[29]

The female red-tailed tropicbird lays one egg, which both parents incubate[39] for 42 to 46 days.[38] The male generally takes the first turn on the egg after it is laid.[41] Ranging from 5.4 to 7.7 centimetres (2.1 to 3.0 in) long (averaging between 6.3 and 6.8 centimetres (2.5 and 2.7 in), depending on location) and 4.5 to 4.8 centimetres (1.8 to 1.9 in) wide, the oval eggs are pale tan with brown and red-black markings that are more prominent on the larger end.[22]

Born helpless and unable to move around (nidicolous and semi-altricial), the chicks are initially blind, opening their eyes after 2–3 days. Until they are a week old, they open their beak only upon touch, so the parents have to stroke the base of the bill to initiate feeding. Feeding takes place once or twice a day, generally around midday. They are constantly brooded by the parents until they are a week old, after which time they are sheltered under the parents’ wings. They also rise up and gape at any nearby bird for food.[21] Both parents feed the young,[37] by shoving its beak into the chick's gullet and then regurgitating food.[43] Initially covered with grey or white down, they grow their first feathers—scapulars—at 16–20 days. Their feet and beaks grow rapidly, outpacing the rest of their bodies.[21] Chicks remain in the nest for 67 to 91 days until they fledge.[38]

Feeding Edit

The red-tailed tropicbird is mostly a plunge diver, diving anywhere from an above-water height of 6 to 50 metres (20 to 164 ft),[38] to a depth of about 4.5 metres (15 ft), although this may change seasonally.[44] When diving, it remains briefly submerged—one study on Christmas Island came up with an average time of 26.6 seconds—generally swallowing its prey before surfacing.[45] The red-tailed tropicbird sometimes catches flying fish in the air.[38]

During incubation, foraging trips are relatively long, with an average excursion taking about 153 hours. These trips are to very productive areas. After the chicks hatch, on the other hand, the parents adopt a strategy where one takes long trips (these averaging about 57 hours) for self feeding, and the other takes short trips (about three hours long) to feed the chicks. The bimodality of the length of foraging trips is likely to be because it is the optimal balance of self-feeding and provisioning for chicks.[46] On Christmas Island, birds generally forage far out to sea in the early morning and closer to shore in the afternoon.[45]

Squid and flying fish make up a large portion of this bird's diet, along with some crustaceans, depending on location.[38] Fieldwork in the Mozambique Channel revealed the diet of birds there to be mostly fish by mass but equal numbers of fish and squid caught. Fish recorded include the mirrorwing flyingfish (Hirundichthys speculiger) and spotfin flyingfish (Cheilopogon furcatus) and several other unidentified species of the flying fish family Exocoetidae, the pompano dolphinfish (Coryphaena equiselis) and common dolphinfish (C. hippurus), needleflish including the houndfish (Tylosurus crocodilus), and unidentified members of Hemiramphidae, Scombridae, and Carangidae. The purpleback flying squid (Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis) was by far the most common cephalopod eaten, followed by the common blanket octopus (Tremoctopus violaceus).[47] A field study in Hawaii found flying fish dominated the prey species, the tropical two-wing flyingfish (Exocoetus volitans) and members of the genus Cypselurus prominent, followed by squid of the family Ommastrephidae including the purpleback flying squid and the glass squid (Hyaloteuthis pelagica), and carangid fish including the shortfin scad (Decapterus macrosoma).[48] The red-tailed tropicbird has also been recorded eating porcupinefish (Diodontidae), although adults have been troubled when the victim fish inflates resulting in it being urgently regurgitated.[49]

A strong flyer with large mouth and bill, the red-tailed tropicbird can carry relatively large prey for its size, parent birds commonly bearing dolphin fish that weighed 120 g—16% of their own weight—to their chicks.[47]

Temperature regulation Edit

When incubating during the day in a shaded nest, this bird has an average temperature of 39 °C (102 °F), compared to its average temperature when incubating at night of 37.1 °C (98.8 °F). The difference is likely due to activity levels, as the air temperature during these times does not differ significantly with a bird in the nest. After flying, the average body temperature is 40.9 °C (105.6 °F). The temperature of the feet is always lower than that of the body temperature during flight, but always higher than the air temperature. Thus, the feet are likely used to dissipate heat during flight.[39]

Relationship with humans Edit

The red-tailed tropicbird's tail streamers were highly prized by the Maori. The Ngāpuhi tribe of the Northland Region would look for and collect them off dead or stray birds blown ashore after easterly gales, trading them for greenstone with tribes from the south.[50] English naturalist Andrew Bloxam reported that the feathers were valued in Hawaii, where the locals would pull them off the birds as they nested.[51]

Status Edit

 
Being swarmed by yellow crazy ants, Johnston Atoll

The red-tailed tropicbird is classified as a least-concern species according to the IUCN on account of its large range of up to 20 thousand square kilometres (7,700 sq mi).[1] The population in the eastern Pacific has been estimated to be as high as 80,000 birds with a minimum of 41,000 birds.[52] Around 9,000 birds breed on Europa Island,[53] and 9,000–12,000 breed on the Hawaiian islands.[15] Human presence generally affects the species adversely, by the destruction of habitat or introduction of pests.[23] Within Australia, it is classified as near threatened, due to unexpected declines in some populations, the impact of humans, and the yellow crazy ant overrunning Christmas Island.[54] It is listed as vulnerable in New South Wales.[55]

Predators recorded in Western Australia include large raptors such as the white-bellied sea eagle (Haliaeetus leucogaster) and the eastern osprey (Pandion cristatus); while silver gulls, and crows and ravens (Corvus spp.) raid nests for eggs and young.[21] Vagrant red-billed tropicbirds (P. aethereus) have been implicated in egg loss of nests in Hawaii.[24] Feral dogs and cats prey on nesting birds on Christmas Island,[21] while feral cats are a severe problem on Norfolk Island.[21] Rats have been a serious problem on Kure Atoll, causing heavy losses.[26] Yellow crazy ants were discovered on Johnston Atoll in the north Pacific Ocean in 2010, hordes of which overrun nesting areas and can blind victims with their spray.[56]

Also on Johnston Atoll, the Johnston Atoll Chemical Agent Disposal System (JACADS) was burning stockpiled chemical weapons until 2000. It was studied over eight years to see if there were effects from potential contaminants. There appeared to be no impact on survival during the study period, although young birds from downwind of the plant were less likely to return there than those upwind of the plant—possibly due to the more intact vegetation at the latter site.[57]

Scientists studying the bird on Lady Elliot Island off the Queensland coast in 2020 say that the lack of knowledge about its habits and populations means that they don't know how much environmental changes are affecting its populations. Their study includes taking DNA samples, banding new chicks and fitting birds with satellite trackers, in a bit to find out more about their movements.[29]

References Edit

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Cited text Edit

  • Marchant, S.; Higgins, P.G., eds. (1990). "Phaethon rubricauda Red-tailed Tropicbird" (PDF). Handbook of Australian, New Zealand & Antarctic Birds. Volume 1: Ratites to ducks; Part B, Australian pelican to ducks. Melbourne, Victoria: Oxford University Press. pp. 935–44. ISBN 978-0-19-553068-1.

External links Edit

  •   Media related to Phaethon rubricauda at Wikimedia Commons

tailed, tropicbird, amokura, redirects, here, zealand, training, ship, amokura, tailed, tropicbird, phaethon, rubricauda, seabird, native, tropical, parts, indian, pacific, oceans, three, closely, related, species, tropicbird, phaethontidae, described, pieter,. Amokura redirects here For the New Zealand training ship see NZS Amokura The red tailed tropicbird Phaethon rubricauda is a seabird native to tropical parts of the Indian and Pacific Oceans One of three closely related species of tropicbird Phaethontidae it was described by Pieter Boddaert in 1783 Superficially resembling a tern in appearance it has almost all white plumage with a black mask and a red bill The sexes have similar plumage As referenced in the common name adults have red tail streamers that are about twice their body length Four subspecies are recognised but there is evidence of clinal variation in body size with smaller birds in the north and larger in the south and hence no grounds for subspecies Red tailed tropicbirdIn flight Kilauea Point Kauai HawaiiConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClade DinosauriaClass AvesOrder PhaethontiformesFamily PhaethontidaeGenus PhaethonSpecies P rubricaudaBinomial namePhaethon rubricaudaBoddaert 1783Range in pink Synonyms 2 Phaethon phoenicuros Gmelin 1789Phaethon novae hollandiae Brandt 1840The red tailed tropicbird eats fish mainly flying fish and squid after catching them by plunge diving into the ocean Nesting takes place in loose colonies on oceanic islands the nest itself is a scrape found on a cliff face in a crevice or on a sandy beach A single egg is laid then is incubated by both sexes for about six weeks The parents make long food foraging trips of about 150 hours during incubation but once the chick has hatched the parents specialize their foraging one forages for the chick for a few hours at a time while the other makes much longer trips to feed themselves This bird is considered to be a least concern species according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature IUCN though it is adversely affected by human contact Rats and feral cats prey on eggs and young at nesting sites The bird s tail streamers were once prized by some Hawaiian and Maori peoples Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour 4 1 Breeding 4 2 Feeding 4 3 Temperature regulation 5 Relationship with humans 6 Status 7 References 7 1 Cited text 8 External linksTaxonomy EditThe British naturalist Sir Joseph Banks encountered the red tailed tropicbird on the Pacific Ocean in March 1769 on James Cook s first voyage noting that it was a different species to the familiar red billed tropicbird He gave it the name Phaeton erubescens 3 It was the French polymath Georges Louis Leclerc Comte de Buffon who formally described the species in his Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux in 1781 noting it was a native of Isle de France Mauritius 4 The bird was also illustrated in a hand coloured plate engraved by Francois Nicolas Martinet in the Planches Enluminees D Histoire Naturelle which was produced under the supervision of Edme Louis Daubenton to accompany Buffon s text 5 Buffon did not include a scientific name with his description but in 1783 the Dutch naturalist Pieter Boddaert coined the binomial name Phaethon rubricauda in his catalogue of the Planches Enluminees 6 The genus name is derived from Ancient Greek phaethon sun while the species epithet comes from the Latin words ruber red and cauda tail 7 English ornithologist John Latham wrote about the red tailed tropicbird in 1785 in his General Synopsis of Birds recording it as common in Mauritius and the South Pacific He also reported a black billed tropicbird collected from Palmerston Island that ended up in Banks collection 8 Latham did not give them binomial names however It was left to German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin to describe the species which he did as Phaeton phoenicuros and P melanorhynchos respectively in the 13th edition of Systema Naturae in 1788 9 Latham later described this black billed specimen as the New Holland tropicbird 10 giving it the name Phaethon novae hollandiae 11 The British naturalist Walter Rothschild reviewed the described names and specimens in 1900 and concluded that the original use of P erubescens was a nomen nudum He concluded that the populations of Lord Howe Norfolk and Kermadec Islands belonged to a distinct subspecies which he named P rubicauda erubescens due to their larger overall size more robust bill and prominent reddish tinge to their plumage He also classified P melanorhynchus and P novae hollandiae as juveniles 11 The Australian amateur ornithologist Gregory Mathews then applied the name P rubicauda roseotinctus to Rothschild s P rubicauda erubescens 12 Red tailed tropicbird has been designated the official name by the International Ornithologists Union IOC 13 Other common names include red tailed bos nbird or silver bos nbird the names derived from the semblance of the tail feathers to a boatswain s marlin spikes and strawtail 7 The New Zealand Maori call it amokura 14 and the native Hawaiians koaʻe ʻula 15 Its closest relative is the white tailed tropicbird P lepturus the split between their ancestors taking place about four million years ago 16 Four subspecies are recognised by the IOC 13 P r rubricauda Boddaert 1783 the nominate subspecies from the western Indian Ocean Subsequent specimens from the Cocos Keeling Islands were allocated to this taxon 17 P r westralis Mathews 1912 from the eastern Indian Ocean Mathews described it as separate on account of its larger wings 18 More extensive analysis in 1989 showed that the wing and beak size overlap between this and the nominate subspecies leaving intensity of colour as the only distinguishing feature 17 P r roseotinctus Mathews 1926 from the southwestern Pacific Ocean including populations on Kermadec Lord Howe Norfolk and Raine Islands 17 P r melanorhynchos Gmelin 1789 from the western central and southern Pacific Ocean including populations on the Cook Islands Tonga Samoa the Marquesas and the Society Islands 17 The ornithologist Mike Tarburton reviewed the known subspecies in 1989 and concluded that none were valid noting that there was a clinal change in size in the species those from Kure Atoll in the North Pacific being the smallest ranging to those from the Kermadec Islands in the South Pacific being the largest He also noted that the pink colouration was more intense in new plumage and faded after a few years in museum specimens 17 Description Edit nbsp Closeup of head showing comma shaped markingsThe red tailed tropicbird measures 95 to 104 cm 37 to 41 in on average which includes the 35 cm 14 in tail streamers and weighs around 800 g 30 oz It has a wingspan of 111 to 119 cm 44 to 47 in It has a streamlined but solid build with almost all white plumage 7 often with a pink tinge 19 The sexes are similar in plumage 7 A dark brown comma shaped stripe extends back from the lores through and over the eyes and reaching the ear coverts 19 The iris is dark brown 20 The bill is bright red slightly paler at the base and black around the nostrils The legs and base of the toes are pale blue mauve while the webbing and rest of the toes are black 20 The white feathers of the head and rump have concealed dark brown bases while those of the mantle back tail rectrices and tail coverts have dark brown shaft bases The two long tail feathers are orange or red with white bases for around a tenth of their length 21 and can be hard to see when the bird is flying The white wings are marked by dark chevron shaped patches on the tertials and the dark shafts of the primary flight feathers are visible 19 The pink tinge is often more pronounced in the remiges of the upper wing 21 Moulting takes place outside the breeding season the streamers being replaced before the rest of the feathers Streamers are replaced at any time one growing while the other is shed and old streamers may litter the area around a breeding colony 20 Newly hatched chicks are covered in thin long grey white down which is paler on the head The lores are bare The down is greyer in older chicks The primaries rectrices and scapulars are evident in the third week and chicks are mostly feathered with residual down on underparts and under the wings after six weeks and fully feathered by 11 weeks 21 Juvenile birds have a glossy white forehead chin throat and underparts 20 and prominent black barring and scaling on their crown nape mantle back rump and upper wing coverts 19 Their bills are blackish grey with a light blue grey base and grey legs and feet 20 In Australian waters the red tailed tropicbird could be confused with the silver gull Chroicocephalus novaehollandiae or various tern species though it is larger and heavier set with a wedge shaped tail Its red bill and more wholly white wings distinguish it from the adult white tailed tropicbird Immature red tailed tropicbirds likewise can be distinguished from immature white tailed tropicbirds by their partly red rather than yellow bills 19 The red tailed tropicbird is generally silent while flying Aside from during courtship displays birds may give a short greeting squawk to their mate when arriving or leaving the nest Birds give a low growling call as a defence call and young chatter repetitively as a begging call made whenever the parents are nearby 22 Distribution and habitat EditThe red tailed tropicbird ranges across the southern Indian and western and central Pacific Oceans from the East African coast to Indonesia the waters around the southern reaches of Japan across to Chile 23 and the Hawaiian Islands where they are more common on the northwestern islands 24 It frequents areas of ocean with water temperatures from 24 to 30 C 75 to 86 F and salinity under 35 in the southern hemisphere and 33 5 in the northern hemisphere In the Pacific Ocean the southern boundary of its range runs along the 22 C 72 F summer surface isotherm 19 The birds disperse widely after breeding Evidence suggests birds in the Indian Ocean follow prevailing winds westwards young individuals banded in Sumatra and Sugarloaf Rock Western Australia being recovered at Mauritius and Reunion respectively 25 Banding on Kure Atoll suggests birds in the North Pacific disperse in an easterly direction following prevailing winds there 26 Strong winds can blow them inland on occasions which explains some sighting records away from the coast and their preferred habitats 7 Johnston Atoll It is the world s largest colony of red tailed tropicbirds with 10 800 nests in 2020 27 In the Pacific area it nests on the Australian offshore territories of Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands and on Queensland s coral islands including Raine Island and Lady Elliot Island 28 In mid 2020 Australian scientists found a bird on Lady Elliott Island that they had banded 23 years earlier as a chick but had not seen since which had come back to breed on the island 29 In New Zealand territory it breeds on the Kermadec Islands 28 Elsewhere in the Pacific it breeds in Fiji New Caledonia French Polynesia Hawaii 23 with a large colony on Kure Atoll 26 the Cook Islands Pitcairn Island and islands off Japan and Chile 23 There are large breeding colonies on Europa 30 Aldabra 31 and Christmas Island in the Indian Ocean with smaller colonies in Madagascar where it nests on the tiny island of Nosy Ve 32 the Seychelles and Mauritius 23 It is also found on the Australian territory of Cocos Keeling Islands in the Indian Ocean 28 The warm waters of the Leeuwin Current facilitate the species nesting at Cape Leeuwin in southwestern Australia yet is only a rare visitor to New South Wales at corresponding latitudes on the Australian east coast 19 It also nests at Ashmore Reef and Rottnest Island off Western Australia as well as Sugarloaf Rock at Cape Naturaliste and Busselton on the Western Australian coastline itself 28 It is an occasional visitor to Palau breeding being recorded from the Southwest Islands 33 and was first recorded from Guam in 1992 34 It is an uncommon vagrant to New Zealand proper where it has been recorded from the northern reaches of North Island especially Three Kings Islands 2 It is a very rare vagrant to North America with records from California and Vancouver Island 35 Behaviour EditThe red tailed tropicbird is a strong flyer and walks on land with difficulty using a shuffling gait 7 Courtship displays consist of flying backwards vertical displays and circles 36 nbsp Flying backwards courtship ritual Kilauea Point HawaiiBreeding Edit nbsp P r rubricuada nesting on Nosy VeThe red tailed tropicbird is thought to be monogamous 29 pairs remaining bonded over successive breeding seasons although such information as age at first breeding and pair formation is not known 37 It nests in loose colonies 38 on offshore islands and stacks rocky cliffs coral atolls and cays It rarely nests on large bodies of land though has done so in southern Western Australia 19 The nest itself is a shallow scrape in either shaded sand 39 or a rocky crevice 38 or under a shrub Because the red tailed tropicbird does not walk well it lands by flying into the wind stalling and dropping to the ground The nest is often located within one metre 3 3 ft of the edge of the shrub or other shaded area to minimise walking distance The tropicbird often chooses shrubs with fewer stems for accessibility 40 nbsp Nesting and sheltering chick under its wing nbsp Egg nbsp Young chick with down nbsp Young bird on Nosy Ve MadagascarThe species is territorial to a degree aggressively defending the nest site and pecking radius around it commencing around three months before breeding 37 Birds are more aggressive at crowded colonies where numbers are large or suitable nest sites less common They adopt a defence posture which consists of raising the humeri up and bringing the wrists together drawing the neck into the body and shaking the head sideways fluffing up the head feathers and squawking Bill jabbing and fights can break out the two combatants locking bills and wrestling for up to 90 minutes 41 Mate choice is likely to be based partially on the length of the tail streamers a bird having longer tail streamers being more attractive as a mate This tropicbird also probably mates assortatively for tail streamer length meaning mates likely have streamers of about equal length 42 In the leadup to breeding males initiate an aerial courtship display of flying in large circles alternating between gliding short periods of rapid wing beating and low flight within a few metres of the water while making sharp cackling calls Initially flying in small groups birds then pair off to repeat the display in pairs before bonding Once pairs have established a nest they do not perform the display 41 The timing of breeding depends on location in some places birds breed in a defined breeding season whereas in others there is none South of the equator the latter is likely to be true On islands near the equator laying usually occurs from June to November the majority of chicks fledging around January to February 38 On Christmas Island breeding takes place at different times on different parts of the island due to prevailing weather conditions 22 Some birds may remain at the breeding site year round 41 On sub tropical Lady Elliott Island off Queensland they nest in winter which scientists think may be timed to avoid the common breeding times of most migratory species of seabird such as the noisy Wedge tailed Shearwater mutton bird Not much is yet known about their habits though 29 The female red tailed tropicbird lays one egg which both parents incubate 39 for 42 to 46 days 38 The male generally takes the first turn on the egg after it is laid 41 Ranging from 5 4 to 7 7 centimetres 2 1 to 3 0 in long averaging between 6 3 and 6 8 centimetres 2 5 and 2 7 in depending on location and 4 5 to 4 8 centimetres 1 8 to 1 9 in wide the oval eggs are pale tan with brown and red black markings that are more prominent on the larger end 22 Born helpless and unable to move around nidicolous and semi altricial the chicks are initially blind opening their eyes after 2 3 days Until they are a week old they open their beak only upon touch so the parents have to stroke the base of the bill to initiate feeding Feeding takes place once or twice a day generally around midday They are constantly brooded by the parents until they are a week old after which time they are sheltered under the parents wings They also rise up and gape at any nearby bird for food 21 Both parents feed the young 37 by shoving its beak into the chick s gullet and then regurgitating food 43 Initially covered with grey or white down they grow their first feathers scapulars at 16 20 days Their feet and beaks grow rapidly outpacing the rest of their bodies 21 Chicks remain in the nest for 67 to 91 days until they fledge 38 Feeding Edit The red tailed tropicbird is mostly a plunge diver diving anywhere from an above water height of 6 to 50 metres 20 to 164 ft 38 to a depth of about 4 5 metres 15 ft although this may change seasonally 44 When diving it remains briefly submerged one study on Christmas Island came up with an average time of 26 6 seconds generally swallowing its prey before surfacing 45 The red tailed tropicbird sometimes catches flying fish in the air 38 During incubation foraging trips are relatively long with an average excursion taking about 153 hours These trips are to very productive areas After the chicks hatch on the other hand the parents adopt a strategy where one takes long trips these averaging about 57 hours for self feeding and the other takes short trips about three hours long to feed the chicks The bimodality of the length of foraging trips is likely to be because it is the optimal balance of self feeding and provisioning for chicks 46 On Christmas Island birds generally forage far out to sea in the early morning and closer to shore in the afternoon 45 Squid and flying fish make up a large portion of this bird s diet along with some crustaceans depending on location 38 Fieldwork in the Mozambique Channel revealed the diet of birds there to be mostly fish by mass but equal numbers of fish and squid caught Fish recorded include the mirrorwing flyingfish Hirundichthys speculiger and spotfin flyingfish Cheilopogon furcatus and several other unidentified species of the flying fish family Exocoetidae the pompano dolphinfish Coryphaena equiselis and common dolphinfish C hippurus needleflish including the houndfish Tylosurus crocodilus and unidentified members of Hemiramphidae Scombridae and Carangidae The purpleback flying squid Sthenoteuthis oualaniensis was by far the most common cephalopod eaten followed by the common blanket octopus Tremoctopus violaceus 47 A field study in Hawaii found flying fish dominated the prey species the tropical two wing flyingfish Exocoetus volitans and members of the genus Cypselurus prominent followed by squid of the family Ommastrephidae including the purpleback flying squid and the glass squid Hyaloteuthis pelagica and carangid fish including the shortfin scad Decapterus macrosoma 48 The red tailed tropicbird has also been recorded eating porcupinefish Diodontidae although adults have been troubled when the victim fish inflates resulting in it being urgently regurgitated 49 A strong flyer with large mouth and bill the red tailed tropicbird can carry relatively large prey for its size parent birds commonly bearing dolphin fish that weighed 120 g 16 of their own weight to their chicks 47 Temperature regulation Edit When incubating during the day in a shaded nest this bird has an average temperature of 39 C 102 F compared to its average temperature when incubating at night of 37 1 C 98 8 F The difference is likely due to activity levels as the air temperature during these times does not differ significantly with a bird in the nest After flying the average body temperature is 40 9 C 105 6 F The temperature of the feet is always lower than that of the body temperature during flight but always higher than the air temperature Thus the feet are likely used to dissipate heat during flight 39 Relationship with humans EditThe red tailed tropicbird s tail streamers were highly prized by the Maori The Ngapuhi tribe of the Northland Region would look for and collect them off dead or stray birds blown ashore after easterly gales trading them for greenstone with tribes from the south 50 English naturalist Andrew Bloxam reported that the feathers were valued in Hawaii where the locals would pull them off the birds as they nested 51 Status Edit nbsp Being swarmed by yellow crazy ants Johnston AtollThe red tailed tropicbird is classified as a least concern species according to the IUCN on account of its large range of up to 20 thousand square kilometres 7 700 sq mi 1 The population in the eastern Pacific has been estimated to be as high as 80 000 birds with a minimum of 41 000 birds 52 Around 9 000 birds breed on Europa Island 53 and 9 000 12 000 breed on the Hawaiian islands 15 Human presence generally affects the species adversely by the destruction of habitat or introduction of pests 23 Within Australia it is classified as near threatened due to unexpected declines in some populations the impact of humans and the yellow crazy ant overrunning Christmas Island 54 It is listed as vulnerable in New South Wales 55 Predators recorded in Western Australia include large raptors such as the white bellied sea eagle Haliaeetus leucogaster and the eastern osprey Pandion cristatus while silver gulls and crows and ravens Corvus spp raid nests for eggs and young 21 Vagrant red billed tropicbirds P aethereus have been implicated in egg loss of nests in Hawaii 24 Feral dogs and cats prey on nesting birds on Christmas Island 21 while feral cats are a severe problem on Norfolk Island 21 Rats have been a serious problem on Kure Atoll causing heavy losses 26 Yellow crazy ants were discovered on Johnston Atoll in the north Pacific Ocean in 2010 hordes of which overrun nesting areas and can blind victims with their spray 56 Also on Johnston Atoll the Johnston Atoll Chemical Agent Disposal System JACADS was burning stockpiled chemical weapons until 2000 It was studied over eight years to see if there were effects from potential contaminants There appeared to be no impact on survival during the study period although young birds from downwind of the plant were less likely to return there than those upwind of the plant possibly due to the more intact vegetation at the latter site 57 Scientists studying the bird on Lady Elliot Island off the Queensland coast in 2020 say that the lack of knowledge about its habits and populations means that they don t know how much environmental changes are affecting its populations Their study includes taking DNA samples banding new chicks and fitting birds with satellite trackers in a bit to find out more about their movements 29 References Edit a b BirdLife International 2020 Phaethon rubricauda IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2020 e T22696641A163889221 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2020 3 RLTS T22696641A163889221 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 a b Gill B J Bell B D Chambers G K Medway D G Palma R L Scofield R P Tennyson A J D Worthy T H 2010 Checklist of the birds of New Zealand Norfolk and Macquarie Islands and the Ross Dependency Antarctica 4th ed Wellington New Zealand Te Papa Press and Ornithological Society of New Zealand pp 136 37 ISBN 9781877385599 Banks Sir Joseph 1896 Journal of the Right Hon Sir Joseph Banks Bart K B P R S During Captain Cook s First Voyage in HMS Endeavour in 1768 71 to Terra Del Fuego Otahite New Zealand Australia the Dutch East Indies Etc London Macmillan pp 65 67 Buffon Georges Louis Leclerc de 1781 Le Paille en Queue a Brins Rouges Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux in French Vol 16 Paris De L Imprimerie Royale pp 116 18 Buffon Georges Louis Leclerc de Martinet Francois Nicolas Daubenton Edme Louis Daubenton Louis Jean Marie 1765 1783 Paille en Queue d Isle de France Planches Enluminees D Histoire 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Jutglar F Garcia E F J Kirwan G M Boesman P 2018 del Hoyo Josep Elliott Andrew Sargatal Jordi Christie David A de Juana Eduardo eds Red tailed Tropicbird Phaethon rubricauda Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive Barcelona Spain Lynx Edicions Retrieved 11 February 2018 a b c Howell Thomas R Bartholomew George A 1962 Temperature regulation in the red tailed tropic bird and the red footed booby Condor 64 1 6 18 doi 10 2307 1365438 JSTOR 1365438 Clark L Ricklefs R E Schreiber R W 1983 Nest site selection by the red tailed tropicbird PDF Auk 100 4 953 959 doi 10 1093 auk 100 4 953 a b c d Marchant amp Higgins 1990 p 940 Boland C R J Double M C Baker G B 2004 Assortative mating by tail streamer length in red tailed tropicbirds Phaethon rubricauda breeding in the Coral Sea Ibis 146 4 687 690 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919x 2004 00310 x Howell Thomas R Bartholomew George A 1969 Experiments on nesting behavior of the red tailed tropicbird Phaethon rubricauda The Condor 71 2 113 119 doi 10 2307 1366072 JSTOR 1366072 Le Corre Matthieu 1997 Diving depths of two tropical Pelecaniformes The red tailed tropicbird and the red footed booby PDF Condor 99 4 1004 1007 doi 10 2307 1370157 JSTOR 1370157 a b Gibson Hill C A 1947 The Normal Food of Tropic birds Phaethon spp Ibis 89 4 658 61 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1947 tb03901 x Sommerfeld Julia Hennicke Janos C 2016 Comparison of trip duration activity pattern and diving behaviour by red tailed tropicbirds Phaethon rubricauda during incubation and chick rearing Emu 110 1 78 86 doi 10 1071 MU09053 S2CID 86746980 a b Le Corre M Cherel Y Lagarde F Lormee H Jouventin P 2003 Seasonal and inter annual variation in the feeding ecology of a tropical oceanic seabird the red tailed tropicbird Phaethon rubricauda PDF Marine Ecology Progress Series 255 289 301 Bibcode 2003MEPS 255 289L doi 10 3354 meps255289 JSTOR 24866967 Archived PDF from the original on 10 December 2012 Harrison Craig S Hida Thomas S Seki Michael P 1983 Hawaiian Seabird Feeding Ecology Wildlife Monographs 85 3 71 27 28 JSTOR 3830593 Ashmole N Philip Ashmole Myrtle Comparative Feeding Ecology of Sea Birds of a Tropical Oceanic Island PDF Bulletin of the Peabody Museum of Natural History Yale University 24 1 139 19 26 Archived PDF from the original on 24 June 2016 Buller Walter Lawry 1888 A History of the Birds of New Zealand Westminster United Kingdom Self p 187 Byron George Anson 1826 Appendix Voyage of H M S Blonde to the Sandwich islands in the years 1824 1825 London John Murray Albemarle Street p 251 Spear Larry B Ainley David G 2005 At sea distributions and abundance of tropicbirds in the eastern Pacific Ibis 147 2 353 66 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919x 2005 00411 x Le Corre Matthieu 2001 Breeding seasons of seabirds at Europa Island southern Mozambique Channel in relation to seasonal changes in the marine environment Journal of Zoology 254 2 239 49 doi 10 1017 S0952836901000759 Garnett Stephen T Crowley Gabriel M 2000 Red tailed Tropicbird The Action Plan For Australian Birds 2000 PDF Canberra ACT Environment Australia pp 152 53 ISBN 0 6425 4683 5 Archived from the original PDF on 20 February 2018 Retrieved 19 February 2018 NSW Threatened Species Scientific Committee 28 February 2011 Red tailed tropicbird vulnerable species listing Determinations Archived from the original on 10 February 2018 Retrieved 19 February 2018 Opar Alisa July August 2015 One Remote Island s Battle Against Acid Spewing Ants Audubon Magazine Archived from the original on 20 February 2018 Retrieved 19 February 2018 Schreiber E A Doherty P F Jr Schenk G A 2004 Dispersal and survival rates of adult and juvenile Red tailed tropicbirds Phaethon rubricauda exposed to potential contaminants PDF Animal Biodiversity and Conservation 27 1 531 40 Archived PDF from the original on 2 December 2017 Cited text Edit Marchant S Higgins P G eds 1990 Phaethon rubricauda Red tailed Tropicbird PDF Handbook of Australian New Zealand amp Antarctic Birds Volume 1 Ratites to ducks Part B Australian pelican to ducks Melbourne Victoria Oxford University Press pp 935 44 ISBN 978 0 19 553068 1 External links Edit nbsp Media related to Phaethon rubricauda at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Red tailed tropicbird amp oldid 1112285559, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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