Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Black bellied tern

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Charadriiformes

Genus
  
Sterna

Higher classification
  
Sterna

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Sternidae

Scientific name
  
Sterna acuticauda

Rank
  
Species

Black-bellied tern Oriental Bird Club Image Database Blackbellied Tern Sterna

Similar
  
Bird, Tern, Indian skimmer, River tern, Sterna

Black bellied tern vs red necked phalarope


The black-bellied tern (Sterna acuticauda) is a tern found near large rivers in the Indian subcontinent, its range extending from Pakistan, Nepal and India to southern China, Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Vietnam. It has become very scarce in the eastern part of its range and the International Union for Conservation of Nature has assessed its conservation status as being endangered.

Contents

Black-bellied tern Oriental Bird Club Image Database Blackbellied Tern Sterna

They have a black belly in the summer and a deep forked tail. They can sometimes resemble whiskered terns (Chlidonias hybrida), but the deeper fork of the tail and the black on the lower belly distinguish them from the shallow fork and black closer to the breast on the whiskered tern. Considering that sequence analysis supports moving the similar black-fronted tern ("Sterna" albostriata) into Chlidonias, this species might also be better placed in that genus, but no research has yet been conducted.

Black-bellied tern Oriental Bird Club Image Database Blackbellied Tern Sterna

Description

Black-bellied tern Oriental Bird Club Image Database Blackbellied Tern Sterna

The black-bellied tern grows to a length of 32 to 35 cm (13 to 14 in). In the breeding plumage, the crown and nape are black and the upper parts are pale grey. The throat is white and the breast pale grey, gradually darkening to a black belly. The wings are long, slender and pointed and the tail is deeply forked with sharply pointed tips. The bill and feet are yellow or orange and the iris is reddish brown. Outside the breeding season, the belly is whitish, the tail is reduced in length and the bill has a dark tip.

Distribution and habitat

Black-bellied tern Blackbellied Tern Sterna acuticauda Birding in India

The species occurs mostly in Pakistan, Nepal, India and Bangladesh, with a separate range in Myanmar, Thailand, southern China, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. Its typical habitat is lowland rivers and marshes, and sometimes ditches and pools, at altitudes of up to about 730 m (2,400 ft). It is an entirely inland species and is not found on the coast.

Ecology

Black-bellied tern wwwbirdsiitkacinsitesdefaultfilesblack20b

The black-bellied tern has long wings but its flight is slow, with much flapping. It feeds on insects and small fish, skimming over the surface of the water and ground to pick up insects, and plunging obliquely into the water to feed on crustaceans, tadpoles and fish. Breeding takes place from February to April, the nesting site usually being a flat sandy location near a river or lake, a sand spit or a sandy island. It does not nest colonially but may nest with other birds such as river terns (Sterna aurantia), pratincoles (Glareola spp.) and Indian skimmers (Rynchops albicollis).

Status

S. acuticauda is classified as being endangered by the International Union for Conservation of Nature. The rationale behind this is that the riverine habitats in which it breeds are under threat in much of southeastern Asia and, although it has an extensive range, it is believed to be extinct or almost extinct in southern China, Nepal, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam. Only in Pakistan, India and Bangladesh are there larger populations, and even in these countries, this bird is thought to be on the decline, and there may be fewer than ten thousand mature individuals in existence. The threats it faces include the degradation of the islands and sandspits on which it breeds, the collection of eggs for food, predation of eggs and chicks by dogs, cats and crows, flooding of nesting sites by the construction of river dams, competition for fish by local fishermen, entanglement in nets, disturbance, extraction of water, sand and gravel dredging and pollution.

References

Black-bellied tern Wikipedia