Harman Patil (Editor)

Great winged petrel

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Kingdom
  
Genus
  
Pterodroma

Higher classification
  
Gadfly petrel

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Scientific name
  
Pterodroma macroptera

Rank
  
Species

Great-winged petrel Surfbirds Online Photo Gallery Search Results

Similar
  
Bird, Gadfly petrel, Soft‑plumaged petrel, White‑headed petrel, Kerguelen petrel

Great winged petrel pterodroma macroptera


The great-winged petrel (Pterodroma macroptera) is a petrel.

Contents

Taxonomy

Great-winged petrel Bird Species Greatwinged Petrel

This species was formerly treated as containing two subspecies - P. m. macroptera and P. m. gouldi, the latter of which is endemic to New Zealand. As of 2014, the latter is recognized as a species in its own right, the grey-faced petrel (Pterodroma gouldi). In 2016 further research was published supporting the full species status of the grey-faced petrel.

Description

Great-winged petrel httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons66

This is a large seabird, with a body length of 42–45 cm. The bird is completely dark brown except for a variable patch of white near the base of the bill, which is black.

Great-winged petrel Greatwinged Petrel Pterodroma macroptera Planet of Birds

It is separated from sooty shearwater and short-tailed shearwater by the all-dark underwing, the thick, stubby bill, and different jizz. The similar flesh-footed shearwater has a light, pinkish bill. Petrels in the genus Procellaria are larger and have a less bounding flight.

Distribution

Great-winged petrel Greatwinged Petrel Bushpea 913

The great-winged petrel breeds in the Southern Hemisphere between 30 and 50 degrees south with colonies on Tristan da Cunha, Gough Island, the Crozet Islands, the Prince Edward Islands, the Kerguelen Islands and on the coasts of southern Australia. It is a rare vagrant to the Pacific Ocean off the coast of California, United States.

Ecology

Great-winged petrel Pterodroma macroptera Greatwinged petrel

The species feeds mostly on squid and to a lesser degree on fish and crustaceans. Prey is generally caught at night, by dipping and surface-seizing. The great-winged petrel will on occasion follow whales and associate with other related bird species to feed. Breeding occurs in the southern winter (beginning in April); nests are either solitary or in small colonies, located in burrows or aboveground among boulders or low vegetation.

References

Great-winged petrel Wikipedia


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