Kalpana Kalpana (Editor)

Red billed tropicbird

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Phaethontiformes

Genus
  
Phaethon

Higher classification
  
Tropicbird

Phylum
  
Chordata

Family
  
Phaethontidae

Scientific name
  
Phaethon aethereus

Rank
  
Species

Red-billed tropicbird ichefbbcicouknaturelibraryimagesiccredit64

Similar
  
Tropicbird, Bird, White‑tailed tropicbird, Masked booby, Brown booby

Birds eye view red billed tropicbirds


The red-billed tropicbird (Phaethon aethereus), also known as the boatswain bird is a tropicbird, one of three closely related seabirds of tropical oceans. The scientific name is derived from Ancient Greek phaethon, "sun" and Latin aetherius, "heavenly".

Contents

Red-billed tropicbird Redbilled Tropicbird Audubon Field Guide

Red billed tropicbird


Distribution and habitat

Red-billed tropicbird Redbilled tropicbird videos photos and facts Phaethon aethereus

The red-billed tropicbird occurs in the tropical Atlantic, eastern Pacific and Indian Oceans. The Indian Ocean race, P. a. indicus, was at one time considered a full species, the lesser red-billed tropicbird from Pakistan and western India. It breeds on tropical islands laying a single egg directly onto the ground or a cliff ledge. Breeding in the Western Palaearctic occurs on the Cape Verde Islands and attempted breeding on the Îles des Madeleines off Senegal. Total numbers in 2000 were probably less than 150 pairs.

Red-billed tropicbird Redbilled tropicbird photo Phaethon aethereus G49184 ARKive

It disperses widely when not breeding, and sometimes wanders far, including five records from Great Britain. In July 2005, one was found in eastern New Brunswick, Canada, and another sighting at Matinicus Rock, Maine. There was confirmed sighting on Lord Howe Island near Australia in November 2010.

Description

Red-billed tropicbird RedBilled Tropicbird

The adult is a slender, mainly white bird, 48 cm long, excluding the central tail feathers which double the total length, and a one-metre wingspan. The long wings have black markings on the flight feathers. There is black through the eye. The bill is red. Sexes are similar, although males average longer tails. Juveniles lack the tail streamers, are greyer-backed, and have a yellow bill. P. a. indicus has a reduced black eye stripe, and a more orange-tinted bill.Its wind are made up of very large feather coat. They feed on fish and squid, but are poor swimmers.

Depiction on banknote

Red-billed tropicbird Redbilled Tropicbird Audubon Field Guide

The red-billed tropicbird was featured in error on the $50 Bermudian dollar and was replaced in 2012 by the white-tailed tropicbird.

References

Red-billed tropicbird Wikipedia