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Difference between revisions of "Long-tailed Jaeger" - BirdForum Opus

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*Blue-grey legs with webbed feet
 
*Blue-grey legs with webbed feet
 
*Bill black; short and stubby compared to other skuas
 
*Bill black; short and stubby compared to other skuas
*Sexes similar<br />
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*Sexes similar. Dark morph (similar to dark morph [[Arctic Skua]] except in structure) known, but extremely rare, only a handful of records ever.<br />
 
'''Juvenile''' has much shorter tail streamers than adult, but still longer than those of other juvenile skuas; streamer tips broad, ''rounded''. Bill grey with a dark tip. Three morphs, varying in darkness:<br />
 
'''Juvenile''' has much shorter tail streamers than adult, but still longer than those of other juvenile skuas; streamer tips broad, ''rounded''. Bill grey with a dark tip. Three morphs, varying in darkness:<br />
 
*Pale morph is extensively pale grey, often with a nearly white head; only flight feathers (primaries, secondaries, retrices) dark
 
*Pale morph is extensively pale grey, often with a nearly white head; only flight feathers (primaries, secondaries, retrices) dark

Revision as of 16:18, 2 October 2017

Alternative name: Long-tailed Skua

S. l. longicaudus, adult
Photo by NIGHTJAR1
Spitzbergen, Norway, June 2007
Stercorarius longicaudus

Identification

Length 50–55 cm (including tail projection of 12–24 cm), wingspan 105–112 cm, weight 230–350 g

S. l. longicaudus, juvenile intermediate morph
Photo by Steve McDonnell
Goswick, Lindisfarne, Northumberland, 1 October 2017

Adult

  • The smallest, and often the scarcest skua
  • Light grey-brown upperparts
  • Creamy white breast, with yellow flush on throat and cheeks
  • Grey belly
  • Black cap (which covers eyes and chin and ends at yellow nape
  • Upperwings dark-edged
  • Primaries blackish, except for white shaft only on outermost two primaries
  • Dark grey tail with black edges and very long, flexible black streamers
  • Blue-grey legs with webbed feet
  • Bill black; short and stubby compared to other skuas
  • Sexes similar. Dark morph (similar to dark morph Arctic Skua except in structure) known, but extremely rare, only a handful of records ever.

Juvenile has much shorter tail streamers than adult, but still longer than those of other juvenile skuas; streamer tips broad, rounded. Bill grey with a dark tip. Three morphs, varying in darkness:

  • Pale morph is extensively pale grey, often with a nearly white head; only flight feathers (primaries, secondaries, retrices) dark
  • Intermediate morph is heavily barred and spotted grey with white patches on underwings, white throat, white belly
  • Dark morph juvenile is much darker overall, with grey throat, and without white belly; only a few pale bars on under-tail coverts

Distribution

S. l. longicaudus, juvenile dark morph
Photo by Scottishdude
Shelford, Nottingham, UK

Breeds on arctic tundra of far northern areas from northern Europe (Norway eastwards), through most of arctic Asia, and Alaska, northern Canada, and Greenland. Migration usually well offshore, but can be seen in good numbers at a few oceanic headlands, such as Ard an Runair on North Uist, Scotland. Winters at sea, primarily between 50–60°S latitude, south of the coasts of South Africa, southern South America and Australia and New Zealand[2].

Taxonomy

Two subspecies are recognised[1]:

  • S. l. longicaudus
  • S. l. pallescens
  • Breeds northern North America and northeastern Asia (white-headed juveniles are more common in this subspecies).

Habitat

Nests on Arctic tundra. Spends winters over open ocean mainly near upwelling zones at the edge of the continental shelfs, usually staying offshore, and very rarely found inland. However, in migration, and especially in central and northern Europe, a juvenile skua found inland on barren tundra should be considered a Long-tailed until proven otherwise.

Behaviour

S. l. longicaudus, adult in flight
Photo by Kudryavtsev
Yamal, arctic European Russia, June 2006

Breeding

Breeding is reliant upon the availability of lemmings, its principal summer food, in almost the entire breeding range.

Vocalisation

<flashmp3>Stercorarius longicaudus (song).mp3</flashmp3>
Listen in an external program

References

  1. Clements, J. F., T. S. Schulenberg, M. J. Iliff, D. Roberson, T. A. Fredericks, B. L. Sullivan, and C. L. Wood. 2017. The eBird/Clements checklist of birds of the world: v2017, with updates to August 2017. Downloaded from http://www.birds.cornell.edu/clementschecklist/download/
  2. Del Hoyo, J, A Elliot, and J Sargatal, eds. 1996. Handbook of the Birds of the World. Volume 3: Hoatzin to Auks. Barcelona: Lynx Edicions. ISBN 978-8487334207
  1. Collins Field Guide 5th Edition
  2. Birdforum thread discussing id of a dark juvenile

Recommended Citation

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