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Difference between revisions of "Western Capercaillie" - BirdForum Opus

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The Western Capercaillie has a wide palaearctic distribution, extending from north-west Spain and Scotland in the west, through central Europe, the Balkans and Scandinavia, the Baltic states and Russia as far east as Lake Baykal, where it overlaps and occasionally hybridises with the [[Black-billed Capercaillie]].  The most southerly confirmed Capercaillie population is at Mount Athos in Greece.  The broad pattern of its distribution matches that of Scots Pine ''Pinus sylvestris'', although other conifers are used towards the edge of its range.  The distribution is highly fragmented in Europe, partly due to suitable habitat being restricted to isolated mountain ranges in southern and central parts of Europe, but also due to habitat fragmentation and degradation and human disturbance.   
 
The Western Capercaillie has a wide palaearctic distribution, extending from north-west Spain and Scotland in the west, through central Europe, the Balkans and Scandinavia, the Baltic states and Russia as far east as Lake Baykal, where it overlaps and occasionally hybridises with the [[Black-billed Capercaillie]].  The most southerly confirmed Capercaillie population is at Mount Athos in Greece.  The broad pattern of its distribution matches that of Scots Pine ''Pinus sylvestris'', although other conifers are used towards the edge of its range.  The distribution is highly fragmented in Europe, partly due to suitable habitat being restricted to isolated mountain ranges in southern and central parts of Europe, but also due to habitat fragmentation and degradation and human disturbance.   
  
Up to 12 sub-species are recognised, although the differences between most are small (many of the southern European forms are slightly smaller and darker), and some authorities recognise only 2 subspecies, ''urogallus'' and ''taczanowskii'', the latter being quite distinctive with a white belly
+
Up to 12 sub-species are recognised, although the differences between most are small (many of the southern European forms are slightly smaller and darker), and some authorities recognise only 2 subspecies, ''urogallus'' and ''taczanowskii'', the latter being quite distinctive with a white belly.  In addition to the Black-billed Capercaillie, the Western Capercaillie is known to hybridise with the [[Black Grouse]] (forming a hybrid known as a Rackelhahn) and the [[Pheasant]].
  
''T.u. urogallus'' - Scandinavia, Scotland
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''T.u. urogallus'' - Scandinavia, Scotland;
''T.u. major'' - Central Europe (Alps, Germany, Poland, Czech Rep. Slovakia, northern Balkans)
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''T.u. major'' - Central Europe (Alps, Germany, Poland, Czech Rep. Slovakia, northern Balkans);
''T.u. aquitanicus'' - Pyrenees
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''T.u. aquitanicus'' - Pyrenees;
''T.u. cantabricus'' - NW Spain
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''T.u. cantabricus'' - NW Spain;
''T.u. rudolfi'' - Carpathians, Bulgaria, Greece
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''T.u. rudolfi'' - Carpathians, Bulgaria, Greece;
''T.u. karelicus'' - Finland, Karelia
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''T.u. karelicus'' - Finland, Karelia;
''T.u. lonnbergi''  -Kola peninsula
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''T.u. lonnbergi''  -Kola peninsula;
''T.u. pleskei'' - Byelorussia, Ukraine, European Russia
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''T.u. pleskei'' - Byelorussia, Ukraine, European Russia;
''T.u.obsoletus'' - north Russia and north Siberia
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''T.u.obsoletus'' - north Russia and north Siberia;
''T.u. volgensis'' - central and south-east Russia
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''T.u. volgensis'' - central and south-east Russia;
''T.u. uralensis'' - southern Urals and south-west Siberia
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''T.u. uralensis'' - southern Urals and south-west Siberia;
 
''T.u. taczanowskii'' - central Siberia, Altai Mountains and north-west Mongolia
 
''T.u. taczanowskii'' - central Siberia, Altai Mountains and north-west Mongolia
  

Revision as of 20:43, 10 July 2007

Tetrao urogallus
Photo by aritervo
Photo taken: Finland.

Description

The Western Capercaillie is the largest species of grouse in the world. The male weighs up to 5kg and measures up to 95cm in length (of which 30-40cm is its long, rounded tail). The female is much smaller, weighing around 2kg and measuring up to 65cm in length, with a proportionally shorter tail than the male. The plumage of the two sexes is also quite different. The male is predominantly dark slate-grey, but with blacker underparts, a dark, glossy green breast and dark brown wings and mantle. Creamy-white speckles often form a band across the central tail feathers and white patches at the shoulder can be very prominent, even from a distance when the male can otherwise appear almost all black. The head of the male capercaillie is very impressive, with a substantial, hooked ivory bill, red eye-wattle and a ragged beard of black feathers on the throat. In flight, whitish-grey underwings can be very obvious. The female capercaillie is predominantly rufous-brown, with heavy black and white barring, particularly on the flanks. The breast is unmarked and appears as a prominent orange-chestnut patch, while the rounded tail is strongly barred orange-chestnut and black. The capercaillie is a strong flier, usually below or just above the tree canopy, but occasionally on longer flights (e.g. across valleys) at higher altitude, when the long tail of the male is particularly obvious.

Identification

For such a large bird, the capercaillie is remarkably secretive and difficult to see, particularly during the summer when it feeds predominantly on the ground in dense shrub vegetation and is reluctant to fly due to moulting. Often the only sign of the presence of capercaillie in a forest is their large, cylindrical droppings (up to 1cm in diameter), mostly comprising pine needles and often found along forest tracks. The bird is easiest to see during its breeding display at traditional 'lek' sites in early mornings in the spring. However, lek sites are very vulnerable to disturbance and due to population declines in much of its range (and particularly in central and western Europe), visiting lek sites is no longer encouraged in many areas. In Scotland, lek sites are protected by law and may not be approached without a licence, although public viewing facilities are provided at one lek site at Loch Garten in Speyside to reduce the temptation that birders might try to visit other leks.

Away from their display grounds, capercaillies are rarely seen perched out in the open, but may occasionally be seen along forest roads and tracks in the early morning, feeding or taking grit. They are most likely to be seen when inadvertently flushed from a tree, or sometimes the ground. Often the first sign of a bird's presence is a crashing sound coming from the branches of a nearby tree, followed by loud, clattering wingbeats as the bird breaks cover and disappears into the forest. Such sightings usually only last a couple of seconds, and are often frustratingly obscured by the surrounding trees. The male capercaillie is usually unmistakeable due to its size, colouring and habitat, but the female can be mistaken for the female Black Grouse (Tetrao tetrix), particularly where the forest adjoins more open ground and both species could be present. However, the female black grouse is generally about two-thirds the size of a hen capercaillie and is usually less rufous in colouring, being grey-brown overall, and lacks the unbarred orange breast. It also has a slightly notched tail in contrast to the rounded tail of the capercaillie. In the far east of the Western Capercaillie's range, the Black-billed Capercaillie is another confusion species and hybrids can occur.

Distribution & Taxonomy

The Western Capercaillie has a wide palaearctic distribution, extending from north-west Spain and Scotland in the west, through central Europe, the Balkans and Scandinavia, the Baltic states and Russia as far east as Lake Baykal, where it overlaps and occasionally hybridises with the Black-billed Capercaillie. The most southerly confirmed Capercaillie population is at Mount Athos in Greece. The broad pattern of its distribution matches that of Scots Pine Pinus sylvestris, although other conifers are used towards the edge of its range. The distribution is highly fragmented in Europe, partly due to suitable habitat being restricted to isolated mountain ranges in southern and central parts of Europe, but also due to habitat fragmentation and degradation and human disturbance.

Up to 12 sub-species are recognised, although the differences between most are small (many of the southern European forms are slightly smaller and darker), and some authorities recognise only 2 subspecies, urogallus and taczanowskii, the latter being quite distinctive with a white belly. In addition to the Black-billed Capercaillie, the Western Capercaillie is known to hybridise with the Black Grouse (forming a hybrid known as a Rackelhahn) and the Pheasant.

T.u. urogallus - Scandinavia, Scotland; T.u. major - Central Europe (Alps, Germany, Poland, Czech Rep. Slovakia, northern Balkans); T.u. aquitanicus - Pyrenees; T.u. cantabricus - NW Spain; T.u. rudolfi - Carpathians, Bulgaria, Greece; T.u. karelicus - Finland, Karelia; T.u. lonnbergi -Kola peninsula; T.u. pleskei - Byelorussia, Ukraine, European Russia; T.u.obsoletus - north Russia and north Siberia; T.u. volgensis - central and south-east Russia; T.u. uralensis - southern Urals and south-west Siberia; T.u. taczanowskii - central Siberia, Altai Mountains and north-west Mongolia

In the fragmented European parts of its range, the bird has declined dramatically as a result of habitat loss, disturbance, and over-hunting. In Scotland for example, it is thought to have become extinct in about 1785, and Scandinavian birds were reintroduced from 1837 onwards (the last releases taking place as recently as the 1990s). This led to a resurgence of the population and it was considered a common bird in Scotland until the 1980s, when it was realised that a dramatic population decline was underway (from an estimated 20,000 birds in the 1970s, to only around 1000 birds in the late 1990s.) Intensive conservation efforts have stopped this decline and a modest recovery has taken place in the early 21st century, although the population is still very vulnerable at arouind 2000 birds.

Habitat

Behaviour

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