fbpx
Wikipedia

Trocaz pigeon

The trocaz pigeon, Madeira laurel pigeon or long-toed pigeon (Columba trocaz) is a pigeon which is endemic to the island of Madeira, Portugal. It is a mainly grey bird with a pinkish breast; its silvery neck patch and lack of white wing markings distinguish it from its close relative and probable ancestor, the common wood pigeon. Its call is a characteristic six-note cooing, weaker and lower-pitched than that of the wood pigeon. Despite its bulky, long-tailed appearance, this pigeon has a fast, direct flight.

Trocaz pigeon
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Columbiformes
Family: Columbidae
Genus: Columba
Species:
C. trocaz
Binomial name
Columba trocaz
Heineken, 1829
Location map
Synonyms
  • Columba laurivora
    Webb, Berthelot & Moquin-Tandon, 1841[2]
  • Trocaza bouvryi
    Bonaparte, 1855[3][4]

A scarce resident breeder in laurisilva forests, the trocaz pigeon lays one white egg in a flimsy twig nest. Its numbers fell sharply after human colonisation of the Madeira archipelago, and it vanished altogether from Porto Santo Island. The major cause of its population decline was habitat loss from forest clearance, but hunting and nest predation by introduced rats were also contributory factors. Protection of the laurel forests and a ban on hunting have enabled numbers to increase, so that the species is no longer endangered.

Description edit

The trocaz pigeon is a rather plain, dark grey bird 40–45 cm (15.7–17.7 in) long with a 68–74 cm (26.8–29.1 in) wingspan.[5] The upper back has a violet sheen, becoming green on the back of the neck, and the neck sides are patterned with silver-white. The tail is blackish with a wide, pale grey band, and the flight feathers are mainly black. The upper breast is pinkish, the eye is yellow, the bill has a yellow tip and a reddish-purple base, and the legs are red. The sexes are similar in appearance, but the juvenile has generally browner plumage, with limited or no development of the silvery neck patch. Its closed wings have a scaly appearance due to pale buff feather edges.[6] The trocaz pigeon's voice is weaker and deeper than that of common wood pigeon, typically consisting of six syllables with the middle pair of notes extended and stressed: uh-uh hrooh-hrooh ho-ho.[5] When flying, it appears heavy and large-tailed, although its flight is rapid and direct.[6]

The common wood pigeon had a poorly defined Madeiran subspecies, Columba palumbus maderensis. This was paler than the trocaz pigeon and had white wing patches and a more extensive green iridescence on the nape,[6] but it became extinct before 1924.[7] Bolle's pigeon is more similar in appearance to the trocaz pigeon, although it lacks the whitish neck patch and has a more extensively pink breast. However, that species is endemic to the Canary Islands, so there is no range overlap.[5] The only other pigeon currently present on Madeira is the feral pigeon; this is slimmer, has more pointed wings and a much smaller tail. It often has dark wing markings, and a lighter flight.[6]

Taxonomy edit

 
Trocaz Pigeon at Monte Palace Tropical Garden, Madeira on June 8, 2019.

The genus Columba is the largest within the pigeon family, and has the widest distribution. Its members are typically pale grey or brown, often with white head or neck markings or iridescent green or purple patches on the neck and breast. The neck feathers may be stiffened and aligned to form grooves. One of several subgroups within Columba consists of the widespread Eurasian common wood pigeon, Bolle's pigeon, the trocaz pigeon, and the African Afep pigeon. The two Macaronesian endemic pigeons, Bolle's and trocaz, are thought to be derived from isolated island populations of C. palumbus.[8]

The Atlantic archipelagos of the Canaries, Azores, and Madeira have a volcanic origin and they have never been part of a continent. The formation of Madeira started in the Miocene and the island was substantially complete by 700,000 years ago.[9] At various times in the past, the major islands of these archipelagos were all colonised by ancestral wood pigeons, which evolved on their respective islands in isolation from the mainland populations. Mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences suggest that the ancestor of Bolle's pigeon may have arrived in the Canaries about 5 mya, but an older lineage that gave rise to another Canarian endemic, the laurel pigeon, C. junoniae, may date from 20 mya.[10] The most recent wood pigeon arrival on Madeira was that which gave rise to the subspecies C. palumbus maderensis.[7]

The trocaz pigeon was formally described in 1829 by Karl Heineken, a German medical doctor and ornithologist who was living on Madeira at the time. He recognised it as different from the now-extinct local form of the common wood pigeon, which he called the "Palumbus", and noted that the two pigeons never interbred or habitually associated together. He suggested designating the new species by its local name, "trocaz".[11] Trocaz is a variant of Portuguese torcaz, the common wood pigeon; both words are ultimately derived from the Latin torquis, a collar, and refer to the bird's coloured neck patches.[12] This is a monotypic species, although in the past Bolle's pigeon was sometimes regarded as a subspecies of the trocaz pigeon.[13]

Distribution and habitat edit

 
Old illustration based on a specimen obtained by Mr Carruthers of Madeira in 1827

The trocaz pigeon is endemic to the mountainous subtropical Atlantic main island of Madeira, although it formerly also bred on the neighbouring Porto Santo Island. It mainly occurs on the northern slopes of the mountains, but smaller numbers are found in the south where suitable patches of laurel forest remain.[14]

The natural habitat is tall laurisilva forest or dense tree heaths which are cloud-covered for much of the year.[15] The forests consist mainly of laurel, Ocotea foetens,[16] Madeira mahogany, Canary laurel, faya, lily-of-the-valley-tree and Picconia excelsa. The trocaz pigeon prefers primary forests, but secondary growth is used for feeding, and agricultural land is also visited, especially at times of fruit shortage.[6] Most of the pigeons are found below 1,000 m (3,300 ft), and their prime environment appears to be steep ravine-indented slopes along artificial watercourses, with the occasional large dead laurel tree and much tree heath.[15] This species is highly mobile between different areas at different times of year.[14]

Behaviour edit

Breeding edit

 
C L Bonaparte described the trocaz pigeon as Trocaza bouvryi in 1855

Pigeons can breed from their first year, and nesting occurs throughout the year, although mainly from February to June. The displays are similar to those of the common wood pigeon; the male climbs quickly in flight, gives a loud wing-clap, and then glides down with his wings and tail spread. The display may be repeated two or three times before the bird returns to a perch. On the ground the male performs a bowing display with his neck inflated to show off the iridescent neck patches; meanwhile, the tail is raised, fanned, then closed again. This display is usually accompanied by calling. The nest is a typical pigeon construction, a flimsy structure of twigs and grasses usually placed high in a tree in thick forest. One, rarely two, smooth white eggs are laid,[6] although no nest with two chicks has ever been found.[17] The eggs, 3.0–5.0 cm (1.2–2.0 in) in size,[18] are incubated for 19–20 days; the young are able to fly in 28 days, and are independent within eight weeks.[6]

Feeding edit

The trocaz pigeon is exclusively herbivorous. Nearly 60% of its diet is fruit, with most of the rest being leaves, and just 1% is flowers. The fruits of Til, Azores Laurel and Persea indica, and the fruits and leaves of small-leaved holly are the most frequently detected food items. Most seeds pass through the digestive system intact, apart from those of Azores Laurel, which are usually damaged. Fruit is the main component of the diet when it is readily available in autumn and winter, and leaves are consumed in spring and summer when fruits are scarce. In one study, 27% of the leaves consumed came from native trees, especially Small-leaved Holly, 61% from herbs and shrubs, and nearly 10% from introduced trees, mainly apples and peaches.[19] This pigeon will feed in agricultural areas, where cabbage is the most commonly taken crop plant. Pigeon faeces from agricultural areas contain few native plants, and samples from forests have few crop species, so some individual birds may concentrate on crops. Feeding in cultivated land is commonest in winter, when fruit is readily available, so it appears not to be a shortage of natural foods that causes them to leave the forest,[20] but is mostly opportunistic, resulting from the birds' movements through nearby forest.[21] However, when the fruit crop of Til and Azores Laurel is poor, large numbers of pigeons may leave the forest to feed on cabbage, flowering cherries and vine shoots.[6] Competition for food with rats can be significant in parts of the island.[17]

Status edit

The trocaz pigeon formerly bred on both the main island of Madeira and nearby Porto Santo Island. It was very abundant when the islands were first colonised by humans, but was extirpated on Porto Santo, and by 1986 had declined to about 2,700 birds. Hunting was banned in that year, and there are now between 7,500 and 10,000 individuals in approximately 160 square kilometres (62 sq mi) of suitable habitat. The losses on the two islands, the only inhabited ones in the archipelago, were largely the result of deforestation for wood and to create agricultural and grazing land.[14]

The exclusion of livestock from the native forest allows the forest to regenerate and create more suitable habitat. Some illegal hunting and poisoning continues because of the damage this pigeon can do to crops, and the government allowed a cull in 2004. Perhaps the main limiting factor on the rate at which the pigeon increases its numbers is predation by introduced black rats on its eggs and young. The Madeira Nature Park has a management plan for the trocaz pigeon, and it is hoped that an education campaign and the promotion of bird scarers may reduce persecution. Its increasing population means that it is now classed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List, an improvement on its Threatened status in 1988.[22] This species is protected under the European Union Birds Directive, and the laurel forests under the Habitats Directive.[17]

References edit

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2017). "Columba trocaz". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T22690112A118618501. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-3.RLTS.T22690112A118618501.en. Retrieved 19 November 2021.
  2. ^ Voisin, C.; Voisin, J.-F.; Jouanin, C.; Bour, R. (2005). (PDF). Zoosystema (in French). 27 (4): 839–866. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-06-12.
  3. ^ Shelley, G. E. (1883). "On the Columbidae of the Ethiopian Region". Ibis. 25 (3): 258–331. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1883.tb07172.x.
  4. ^ Godman, F du Cane (1872). "Notes on the Resident and Migratory Birds of Madeira and the Canaries". Ibis. 14 (3): 209–224. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1872.tb08403.x.
  5. ^ a b c Mullarney (1999) p. 216.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h Gibbs (2000) pp. 188–189.
  7. ^ a b Prins, G. . Type specimens in 3-D. Zoological Museum, Amsterdam. Archived from the original on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 9 August 2010.
  8. ^ Gibbs (2000) p. 175.
  9. ^ "Madeira". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 20 July 2010
  10. ^ Gonzalez, Javier; Castro, Guillermo Delgado; Garcia-del-Rey, Eduardo; Berger, Carola; Wink, Michael (2009). "Use of mitochondrial and nuclear genes to infer the origin of two endemic pigeons from the Canary Islands". Journal of Ornithology. 150 (2): 357–367. doi:10.1007/s10336-008-0360-4. S2CID 24740854.
  11. ^ Heineken, Karl (1829). "Notice of some of the Birds of Madeira". Edinburgh Journal of Science. 1 (2): 230.
  12. ^ Weiszflog, Walter (1998). Michaelis Moderno Dicionario Da Lingua Portuguesa (in Portuguese). São Paulo: Editora Melhoramentos Ltda. ISBN 978-85-06-02759-2.
  13. ^ Martin, A (1985). "Première observation du pigeon Trocaz (Columba trocaz bollii) à l'Ile de Hierro (Iles Canaries)". Alauda (in French). 53 (2): 137–140.
  14. ^ a b c "BirdLife International Species factsheet: Columba trocaz". BirdLife International. Retrieved 7 July 2010.
  15. ^ a b Snow (1998) p. 848.
  16. ^ Hartert, E (1912–21). Die Vögel der paläarktischen Fauna. Volume 2 (in German). Berlin: H. Friedlander & Sohn. p. 1480.
  17. ^ a b c Oliveira, Paulo; Heredia, Borja. "Action plan for the Madeira Laurel Pigeon (Columba trocaz)" (PDF). Funchal: Parque Natural da Madeira.
  18. ^ Dresser, Henry Eeles (1903). Manual of Palearctic Birds. Vol. 2. London: self-published. p. 645.
  19. ^ Oliveira, Paulo; Marrero, Patricia; Nogales, Manuel (2002). "Diet of the endemic Madeira Laurel Pigeon and fruit resource availability: a study using microhistological analyses" (PDF). The Condor. 104 (4): 811–822. doi:10.1650/0010-5422(2002)104[0811:DOTEML]2.0.CO;2. S2CID 55469944.
  20. ^ Marrero, Patricia; Oliveira, Paulo; Nogales, Manuel (2004). "Diet of the endemic Madeira Laurel Pigeon Columba trocaz in agricultural and forest areas: implications for conservation" (PDF). Bird Conservation International. 14 (3): 165–172. doi:10.1017/S0959270904000218. S2CID 85691581.
  21. ^ Oliveira, Paulo; Menezes Dilia; Jones Martin; Nogales Manuel (2006). (PDF). Biological Conservation. 130 (4): 538–548. Bibcode:2006BCons.130..538O. doi:10.1016/j.biocon.2006.01.016. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2010-09-24.
  22. ^ "Madeira Laurel Pigeon ( Columba trocaz ) – BirdLife species factsheet (additional data)". BirdLife International. Retrieved 15 October 2010.

Cited text edit

  • Gibbs, David; Barnes, Eustace; Cox, John (2000). Pigeons and Doves: A Guide to the Pigeons and Doves of the World. Robertsbridge, Sussex: Pica Press. ISBN 978-1-873403-60-0.
  • Mullarney, Killian; Svensson, Lars; Zetterstrom, Dan; Grant, Peter (1999). Collins Bird Guide. London: Collins. ISBN 978-0-00-219728-1.
  • Snow, David (1998). Perrins, Christopher M (ed.). The Birds of the Western Palearctic concise edition (2 volumes). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-854099-1.

External links edit

  • Madeira Birds: Trocaz Pigeon

trocaz, pigeon, trocaz, pigeon, madeira, laurel, pigeon, long, toed, pigeon, columba, trocaz, pigeon, which, endemic, island, madeira, portugal, mainly, grey, bird, with, pinkish, breast, silvery, neck, patch, lack, white, wing, markings, distinguish, from, cl. The trocaz pigeon Madeira laurel pigeon or long toed pigeon Columba trocaz is a pigeon which is endemic to the island of Madeira Portugal It is a mainly grey bird with a pinkish breast its silvery neck patch and lack of white wing markings distinguish it from its close relative and probable ancestor the common wood pigeon Its call is a characteristic six note cooing weaker and lower pitched than that of the wood pigeon Despite its bulky long tailed appearance this pigeon has a fast direct flight Trocaz pigeon Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Columbiformes Family Columbidae Genus Columba Species C trocaz Binomial name Columba trocazHeineken 1829 Location map Synonyms Columba laurivoraWebb Berthelot amp Moquin Tandon 1841 2 Trocaza bouvryiBonaparte 1855 3 4 A scarce resident breeder in laurisilva forests the trocaz pigeon lays one white egg in a flimsy twig nest Its numbers fell sharply after human colonisation of the Madeira archipelago and it vanished altogether from Porto Santo Island The major cause of its population decline was habitat loss from forest clearance but hunting and nest predation by introduced rats were also contributory factors Protection of the laurel forests and a ban on hunting have enabled numbers to increase so that the species is no longer endangered Contents 1 Description 2 Taxonomy 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour 4 1 Breeding 4 2 Feeding 5 Status 6 References 7 Cited text 8 External linksDescription editThe trocaz pigeon is a rather plain dark grey bird 40 45 cm 15 7 17 7 in long with a 68 74 cm 26 8 29 1 in wingspan 5 The upper back has a violet sheen becoming green on the back of the neck and the neck sides are patterned with silver white The tail is blackish with a wide pale grey band and the flight feathers are mainly black The upper breast is pinkish the eye is yellow the bill has a yellow tip and a reddish purple base and the legs are red The sexes are similar in appearance but the juvenile has generally browner plumage with limited or no development of the silvery neck patch Its closed wings have a scaly appearance due to pale buff feather edges 6 The trocaz pigeon s voice is weaker and deeper than that of common wood pigeon typically consisting of six syllables with the middle pair of notes extended and stressed uh uh hrooh hrooh ho ho 5 When flying it appears heavy and large tailed although its flight is rapid and direct 6 The common wood pigeon had a poorly defined Madeiran subspecies Columba palumbus maderensis This was paler than the trocaz pigeon and had white wing patches and a more extensive green iridescence on the nape 6 but it became extinct before 1924 7 Bolle s pigeon is more similar in appearance to the trocaz pigeon although it lacks the whitish neck patch and has a more extensively pink breast However that species is endemic to the Canary Islands so there is no range overlap 5 The only other pigeon currently present on Madeira is the feral pigeon this is slimmer has more pointed wings and a much smaller tail It often has dark wing markings and a lighter flight 6 Taxonomy edit nbsp Trocaz Pigeon at Monte Palace Tropical Garden Madeira on June 8 2019 The genus Columba is the largest within the pigeon family and has the widest distribution Its members are typically pale grey or brown often with white head or neck markings or iridescent green or purple patches on the neck and breast The neck feathers may be stiffened and aligned to form grooves One of several subgroups within Columba consists of the widespread Eurasian common wood pigeon Bolle s pigeon the trocaz pigeon and the African Afep pigeon The two Macaronesian endemic pigeons Bolle s and trocaz are thought to be derived from isolated island populations of C palumbus 8 The Atlantic archipelagos of the Canaries Azores and Madeira have a volcanic origin and they have never been part of a continent The formation of Madeira started in the Miocene and the island was substantially complete by 700 000 years ago 9 At various times in the past the major islands of these archipelagos were all colonised by ancestral wood pigeons which evolved on their respective islands in isolation from the mainland populations Mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences suggest that the ancestor of Bolle s pigeon may have arrived in the Canaries about 5 mya but an older lineage that gave rise to another Canarian endemic the laurel pigeon C junoniae may date from 20 mya 10 The most recent wood pigeon arrival on Madeira was that which gave rise to the subspecies C palumbus maderensis 7 The trocaz pigeon was formally described in 1829 by Karl Heineken a German medical doctor and ornithologist who was living on Madeira at the time He recognised it as different from the now extinct local form of the common wood pigeon which he called the Palumbus and noted that the two pigeons never interbred or habitually associated together He suggested designating the new species by its local name trocaz 11 Trocaz is a variant of Portuguese torcaz the common wood pigeon both words are ultimately derived from the Latin torquis a collar and refer to the bird s coloured neck patches 12 This is a monotypic species although in the past Bolle s pigeon was sometimes regarded as a subspecies of the trocaz pigeon 13 Distribution and habitat edit nbsp Old illustration based on a specimen obtained by Mr Carruthers of Madeira in 1827 The trocaz pigeon is endemic to the mountainous subtropical Atlantic main island of Madeira although it formerly also bred on the neighbouring Porto Santo Island It mainly occurs on the northern slopes of the mountains but smaller numbers are found in the south where suitable patches of laurel forest remain 14 The natural habitat is tall laurisilva forest or dense tree heaths which are cloud covered for much of the year 15 The forests consist mainly of laurel Ocotea foetens 16 Madeira mahogany Canary laurel faya lily of the valley tree and Picconia excelsa The trocaz pigeon prefers primary forests but secondary growth is used for feeding and agricultural land is also visited especially at times of fruit shortage 6 Most of the pigeons are found below 1 000 m 3 300 ft and their prime environment appears to be steep ravine indented slopes along artificial watercourses with the occasional large dead laurel tree and much tree heath 15 This species is highly mobile between different areas at different times of year 14 Behaviour editBreeding edit nbsp C L Bonaparte described the trocaz pigeon as Trocaza bouvryi in 1855 Pigeons can breed from their first year and nesting occurs throughout the year although mainly from February to June The displays are similar to those of the common wood pigeon the male climbs quickly in flight gives a loud wing clap and then glides down with his wings and tail spread The display may be repeated two or three times before the bird returns to a perch On the ground the male performs a bowing display with his neck inflated to show off the iridescent neck patches meanwhile the tail is raised fanned then closed again This display is usually accompanied by calling The nest is a typical pigeon construction a flimsy structure of twigs and grasses usually placed high in a tree in thick forest One rarely two smooth white eggs are laid 6 although no nest with two chicks has ever been found 17 The eggs 3 0 5 0 cm 1 2 2 0 in in size 18 are incubated for 19 20 days the young are able to fly in 28 days and are independent within eight weeks 6 Feeding edit The trocaz pigeon is exclusively herbivorous Nearly 60 of its diet is fruit with most of the rest being leaves and just 1 is flowers The fruits of Til Azores Laurel and Persea indica and the fruits and leaves of small leaved holly are the most frequently detected food items Most seeds pass through the digestive system intact apart from those of Azores Laurel which are usually damaged Fruit is the main component of the diet when it is readily available in autumn and winter and leaves are consumed in spring and summer when fruits are scarce In one study 27 of the leaves consumed came from native trees especially Small leaved Holly 61 from herbs and shrubs and nearly 10 from introduced trees mainly apples and peaches 19 This pigeon will feed in agricultural areas where cabbage is the most commonly taken crop plant Pigeon faeces from agricultural areas contain few native plants and samples from forests have few crop species so some individual birds may concentrate on crops Feeding in cultivated land is commonest in winter when fruit is readily available so it appears not to be a shortage of natural foods that causes them to leave the forest 20 but is mostly opportunistic resulting from the birds movements through nearby forest 21 However when the fruit crop of Til and Azores Laurel is poor large numbers of pigeons may leave the forest to feed on cabbage flowering cherries and vine shoots 6 Competition for food with rats can be significant in parts of the island 17 Status editThe trocaz pigeon formerly bred on both the main island of Madeira and nearby Porto Santo Island It was very abundant when the islands were first colonised by humans but was extirpated on Porto Santo and by 1986 had declined to about 2 700 birds Hunting was banned in that year and there are now between 7 500 and 10 000 individuals in approximately 160 square kilometres 62 sq mi of suitable habitat The losses on the two islands the only inhabited ones in the archipelago were largely the result of deforestation for wood and to create agricultural and grazing land 14 The exclusion of livestock from the native forest allows the forest to regenerate and create more suitable habitat Some illegal hunting and poisoning continues because of the damage this pigeon can do to crops and the government allowed a cull in 2004 Perhaps the main limiting factor on the rate at which the pigeon increases its numbers is predation by introduced black rats on its eggs and young The Madeira Nature Park has a management plan for the trocaz pigeon and it is hoped that an education campaign and the promotion of bird scarers may reduce persecution Its increasing population means that it is now classed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List an improvement on its Threatened status in 1988 22 This species is protected under the European Union Birds Directive and the laurel forests under the Habitats Directive 17 References edit BirdLife International 2017 Columba trocaz IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T22690112A118618501 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 3 RLTS T22690112A118618501 en Retrieved 19 November 2021 Voisin C Voisin J F Jouanin C Bour R 2005 Liste des types d oiseaux des collections du Museum national d Histoire naturelle de Paris 14 Pigeons Columbidae deuxieme partie PDF Zoosystema in French 27 4 839 866 Archived from the original PDF on 2011 06 12 Shelley G E 1883 On the Columbidae of the Ethiopian Region Ibis 25 3 258 331 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1883 tb07172 x Godman F du Cane 1872 Notes on the Resident and Migratory Birds of Madeira and the Canaries Ibis 14 3 209 224 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919X 1872 tb08403 x a b c Mullarney 1999 p 216 a b c d e f g h Gibbs 2000 pp 188 189 a b Prins G Columba palumbus maderensis Type specimens in 3 D Zoological Museum Amsterdam Archived from the original on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 9 August 2010 Gibbs 2000 p 175 Madeira Global Volcanism Program Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 20 July 2010 Gonzalez Javier Castro Guillermo Delgado Garcia del Rey Eduardo Berger Carola Wink Michael 2009 Use of mitochondrial and nuclear genes to infer the origin of two endemic pigeons from the Canary Islands Journal of Ornithology 150 2 357 367 doi 10 1007 s10336 008 0360 4 S2CID 24740854 Heineken Karl 1829 Notice of some of the Birds of Madeira Edinburgh Journal of Science 1 2 230 Weiszflog Walter 1998 Michaelis Moderno Dicionario Da Lingua Portuguesa in Portuguese Sao Paulo Editora Melhoramentos Ltda ISBN 978 85 06 02759 2 Martin A 1985 Premiere observation du pigeon Trocaz Columba trocaz bollii a l Ile de Hierro Iles Canaries Alauda in French 53 2 137 140 a b c BirdLife International Species factsheet Columba trocaz BirdLife International Retrieved 7 July 2010 a b Snow 1998 p 848 Hartert E 1912 21 Die Vogel der palaarktischen Fauna Volume 2 in German Berlin H Friedlander amp Sohn p 1480 a b c Oliveira Paulo Heredia Borja Action plan for the Madeira Laurel Pigeon Columba trocaz PDF Funchal Parque Natural da Madeira Dresser Henry Eeles 1903 Manual of Palearctic Birds Vol 2 London self published p 645 Oliveira Paulo Marrero Patricia Nogales Manuel 2002 Diet of the endemic Madeira Laurel Pigeon and fruit resource availability a study using microhistological analyses PDF The Condor 104 4 811 822 doi 10 1650 0010 5422 2002 104 0811 DOTEML 2 0 CO 2 S2CID 55469944 Marrero Patricia Oliveira Paulo Nogales Manuel 2004 Diet of the endemic Madeira Laurel Pigeon Columba trocaz in agricultural and forest areas implications for conservation PDF Bird Conservation International 14 3 165 172 doi 10 1017 S0959270904000218 S2CID 85691581 Oliveira Paulo Menezes Dilia Jones Martin Nogales Manuel 2006 The influence of fruit abundance on the use of forest and cultivated field habitats by the endemic Madeira laurel pigeon Columba trocaz Implications for conservation PDF Biological Conservation 130 4 538 548 Bibcode 2006BCons 130 538O doi 10 1016 j biocon 2006 01 016 Archived from the original PDF on 2010 09 24 Madeira Laurel Pigeon Columba trocaz BirdLife species factsheet additional data BirdLife International Retrieved 15 October 2010 Cited text editGibbs David Barnes Eustace Cox John 2000 Pigeons and Doves A Guide to the Pigeons and Doves of the World Robertsbridge Sussex Pica Press ISBN 978 1 873403 60 0 Mullarney Killian Svensson Lars Zetterstrom Dan Grant Peter 1999 Collins Bird Guide London Collins ISBN 978 0 00 219728 1 Snow David 1998 Perrins Christopher M ed The Birds of the Western Palearctic concise edition 2 volumes Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 854099 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Columba trocaz Madeira Birds Trocaz Pigeon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Trocaz pigeon amp oldid 1209465964, 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.