![]() | ||
Diving birds pelicans bombing for fish nice pelican pictures
Diving birds are birds which plunge into water to catch fish or other food. They may enter the water from flight, as does the brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis), or they may dive from the surface of the water. More than likely they evolved from birds already adapted for swimming that were equipped with such adaptations as lobed or webbed feet for propulsion.
Contents
- Diving birds pelicans bombing for fish nice pelican pictures
- Plunge diving birds
- Foot propelled diving birds
- Wing propelled diving birds
- References
Plunge diving birds
Foot-propelled diving birds
Some diving birds - for example, the extinct Hesperornithes of the Cretaceous Period - propelled themselves with their feet. They were large, streamlined, flightless birds with teeth for grasping slippery prey. Today, Cormorants (family Phalacrocoracidae), Loons (Gaviidae), and Grebes (Podicipedidae) are the major groups of foot propelled diving birds.
Wing-propelled diving birds
Other diving birds are wing - propelled, most notably the Penguins (Sphenisciformes), Dippers (Cinclus) and Auks (Alcidae).