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Clark's grebe

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Podicipediformes

Genus
  
Aechmophorus

Higher classification
  
Aechmophorus

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Podicipedidae

Scientific name
  
Aechmophorus clarkii

Rank
  
Species

Clark's grebe Clark39s grebe videos photos and facts Aechmophorus clarkii ARKive

Similar
  
Western grebe, Grebe, Bird, Aechmophorus, Pied‑billed grebe

North american wildlife clark s grebe western grebe back to back comparison


Clark's grebe (Aechmophorus clarkii) is a North American species in the grebe family. Until the 1980s, it was thought to be a pale morph of the western grebe, which it resembles in size, range, and behavior. Intermediates between the two species are known.

Contents

Clark's grebe Clark39s Grebe

The "Clark" of its common name—and its specific epithet clarkii—honors John Henry Clark, a 19th-century American surveyor who was also a naturalist and collector. The genus name Aechmophorus comes from the Ancient Greek words "aichme", meaning spear, and "phoros", meaning someone who bears things around; it refers to the bird's long, daggerlike beak.

Clark's grebe Clark39s Grebe Multimedia Birds of North America Online

This species nests on large inland lakes in western North America and migrates to the Pacific coast in winter. It maintains local populations year-round in California, Nevada, and Arizona (the Lower Colorado River Valley), as well as in central Mexico. It feeds by diving for carp, herring, mollusks, crabs, and salamanders.

Clark's grebe httpswwwallaboutbirdsorgguidePHOTOLARGEcl

It performs the same elaborate courtship display as the western grebe.

Clark s grebe nominated for 2010 bird of the year


Description

Clark's grebe Clark39s Grebe Identification All About Birds Cornell Lab of

Clark's grebe is black-and-white and has long slender neck. It ranges in size from 22–29 inches (56–74 cm). Among its distinguishing features is its bill, which is slightly upturned and bright yellow, whereas the western grebe's bill is straight and greenish-yellow. It shows white around its eyes, whereas black appears around the eyes of the western grebe. The downy young are white, not gray.

Subspecies

There are two subspecies of Clark's grebe:

Clark's grebe Clark39s Grebe Audubon Field Guide

  • A. c. clarkii, (Lawrence, 1858), north & central Mexico
  • A. c. transitionalis, (Dickerman, 1986), western Canada & western United States
  • References

    Clark's grebe Wikipedia