Striated heron explained
The striated heron (Butorides striata) also known as mangrove heron, little green heron or green-backed heron, is a small heron, about 44 cm tall. Striated herons are mostly sedentary and noted for some interesting behavioral traits. Their breeding habitat is small wetlands in the Old World tropics from west Africa to Japan and Australia, and in South America and the Caribbean. Vagrants have been recorded on Oceanic islands, such as Chuuk and Yap in the Federated States of Micronesia, the Marianas and Palau; the bird recorded on Yap on February 25, 1991, was from a continental Asian rather than from a Melanesian population, while the origin of the bird seen on Palau on May 3, 2005 was not clear.[1]
Taxonomy
The striated heron was formally described by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae. He placed it with the other herons in the genus Ardea and coined the binomial name Ardea striata. Linnaeus specified the locality as Suriname.[2] [3] The specific epithet is from Latin striatus meaning "striated".[4] The striated heron is now one of three closely related species placed in the genus Butorides that was introduced in 1852 by the English zoologist Edward Blyth.[5]
This bird was long considered to be conspecific with the closely related North American species, the green heron, which is now usually separated as Butorides virescens, as well as the lava heron of the Galápagos Islands (now Butorides sundevalli, but often included in Butorides striata, e.g. by BirdLife International[6]); collectively they were called "green-backed herons".
Twenty one subspecies are recognised:[5]
- B. s. striata (Linnaeus, 1758) – east Panama to north Argentina, Bolivia and Chile
- B. s. atricapilla (Afzelius, 1804) – Africa south of the Sahara
- B. s. brevipes (Hemprich & Ehrenberg, 1833) – Somalia and the Red Sea coasts
- B. s. rutenbergi (Hartlaub, 1880) – Madagascar and Réunion
- B. s. rhizophorae Salomonsen, 1934 – Comoros
- B. s. crawfordi Nicoll, 1906 – Aldabra and Amirante groups (south, central Seychelles)
- B. s. degens Hartert, EJO, 1920 – northeast Seychelles
- B. s. albolimbata Reichenow, 1900 – Chagos Archipelago and Maldives
- B. s. spodiogaster Sharpe, 1894 – Andaman and Nicobar Islands and islands off west Sumatra
- B. s. amurensis (Schrenck, 1860) – southeast Siberia, northeast China and Japan
- B. s. actophila Oberholser, 1912 – east China to north Myanmar and north Vietnam
- B. s. javanica (Horsfield, 1821) – Pakistan, India and Sri Lanka to Thailand, Philippines, the Greater Sundas and Sulawesi
- B. s. steini Mayr, 1943 – Lesser Sunda Islands
- B. s. moluccarum Hartert, EJO, 1920 – Moluccas
- B. s. papuensis Mayr, 1940 – northwest New Guinea
- B. s. idenburgi Rand, 1941 – north New Guinea
- B. s. flyensis Salomonsen, 1966 – central south, southeast New Guinea
- B. s. macrorhyncha (Gould, 1848) – east, northeast Australia and New Caledonia
- B. s. stagnatilis (Gould, 1848) – northwest, central north Australia
- B. s. patruelis (Peale, 1849) – Tahiti Islands (Society Islands)
- B. s. solomonensis Mayr, 1940 – New Hanover Island (=New Hanover) to Solomon Islands (except Rennell Island), and Vanuatu to Fiji (southwest Polynesia)
Description
The striated heron is in length, weighs and has a wing-span of . The sexes are alike. The plumage is vary variable, even sometimes within the same race.[7] Adults have a blue-grey back and wings, white underparts, a black cap, a dark line extends from the bill to under the eye and short yellow legs. Juveniles are browner above and streaked below.
Behaviour
Food and feeding
These birds stand still at the water's edge and wait to ambush prey, but are easier to see than many small heron species. They mainly eat small fish, frogs and aquatic insects. They sometimes use bait, dropping a feather or leaf carefully on the water surface and picking fish that come to investigate.[8]
Breeding
The nest is a platform of sticks measuring between 20–40 cm long and 0.5–5 mm thick. The entire nest measures some 40–50 cm wide and 8–10 cm high outside, with an inner depression 20 cm wide and 4–5 cm deep. It is usually built in shrubs or trees but sometimes in sheltered locations on the ground, and often near water. The clutch is 2–5 eggs, which are pale blue and measure around 36 by 28 mm.[9]
An adult bird was once observed in a peculiar and mysterious behavior: while on the nest, it would grab a stick in its bill and make a rapid back-and-forth motion with the head, like a sewing machine's needle. The significance of this behavior is completely unknown: While such movements occur in many other nesting birds where they seem to compact the nest, move the eggs, or dislodge parasites, neither seems to have been the case in this particular striated heron.
Young birds will give a display when they feel threatened, by stretching out their necks and pointing the bill skywards. How far this would deter predators is not known.
Widespread and generally common, the striated heron is classified as a species of least concern by the IUCN; this holds true whether the lava heron is included in Butorides striata or not.
Sources
- Boswall, J. (1983): Tool-using and related behavior in birds: more notes. Avicultural Magazine 89: 94–108.
- Greeney, Harold F. & Merino M., Paúl A. (2006): Notes on breeding birds from the Cuyabeno Faunistic Reserve in northeastern Ecuador. Boletín de la Sociedad Antioqueña de Ornitología 16(2): 46–57. PDF fulltext
- Norris, D. (1975): Green Heron (Butorides virescens) uses feather lure for fishing. American Birds 29: 652–654.
- Robinson, S.K. (1994): Use of bait and lures by Green-backed Herons in Amazonian Peru. Wilson Bulletin 106(3): 569–571
- Walsh, J.F.; Grunewald, J. & Grunewald, B. (1985): Green-backed Herons (Butorides striatus) possibly using a lure and using apparent bait. J. Ornithol. 126: 439–442.
- Wiles, Gary J.; Worthington, David J.; Beck, Robert E. Jr.; Pratt, H. Douglas; Aguon, Celestino F. & Pyle, Robert L. (2000): Noteworthy Bird Records for Micronesia, with a Summary of Raptor Sightings in the Mariana Islands, 1988–1999. Micronesica 32(2): 257–284. PDF fulltext
- VanderWerf, Eric A.; Wiles, Gary J.; Marshall, Ann P. & Knecht, Melia (2006): Observations of migrants and other birds in Palau, April–May 2005, including the first Micronesian record of a Richard's Pipit. Micronesica 39(1): 11–29. PDF fulltext
External links
Notes and References
- Wiles et al. (2000), VanderWerf et al. (2006)
- Book: Linnaeus, Carl . Carl Linnaeus . 1758 . Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis . 1 . 10th . 144 . Laurentii Salvii . Holmiae (Stockholm) . Latin .
- Book: Mayr . Ernst . Ernst Mayr . Cottrell . G. William . 1979 . Check-List of Birds of the World . 1 . 2nd . Museum of Comparative Zoology . Cambridge, Massachusetts . 220 .
- Book: Jobling, James A. . 2010. The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names . Christopher Helm . London . 978-1-4081-2501-4 . 367 .
- Web site: Gill . Frank . Frank Gill (ornithologist) . Donsker . David . Rasmussen . Pamela . Pamela Rasmussen . July 2023 . Ibis, spoonbills, herons, Hamerkop, Shoebill, pelicans . IOC World Bird List Version 13.2 . International Ornithologists' Union . 20 September 2023 .
- BLI (2008)
- Book: Martínez-Vilalta . A. . Motis . A. . 1992 . Family Ardeida (Herons) . del Hoyo . J. . Elliott . A. . Sargatal . J. . Handbook of the Cornel . 1: Ostrich to Ducks . Barcelona, Spain . Lynx Edicions . 84-87334-10-5 . 376–429 [417] . https://archive.org/details/handbookofbirdso0001unse/page/417/mode/1up . registration .
- Norris (1975), Boswall (1983), Walsh et al. (1985), Robinson (1994)
- Greeney & Merino M. (2006)