The horned grebe or Slavonian grebe (Podiceps auritus) is a relatively small and threatened species of waterbird in the family Podicipedidae.[1] There are two subspecies, P. a. auritus (Slavonian grebe), which breeds in Eurasia, and P. a. cornutus (horned grebe), which breeds in North America.[2][3][4] The Eurasian subspecies is distributed over most of northern Europe and northern Asia, breeding from Iceland east to the Russian Far East.[5] The North American subspecies spans most of Canada and some of the United States.[6] A small population was cited in Greenland in 1973,[5] but is not mapped or further mentioned by subsequent authors.[2][4][3]
The American name 'horned' refers to the orange-yellow crest feathers located above and behind the eyes, called "horns". The English name, originally 'Sclavonian', is first attested by George Montagu in his 1802 Ornithological Dictionary,[7] from Sclavonia, an old name for northern Russia, referring to the species' main breeding area in Europe;[8] the spelling was emended (without any reason given) to the current 'Slavonian' by Hartert in 1912.[9]
Taxonomy
The horned grebe was formally described in 1758 by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae under the binomial nameColymbus auritus.[10] Linnaeus specified the type locality as Europe and America but this has been restricted to Vaasa in Finland.[11] The horned grebe is now one of the nine species placed in the genus Podiceps that was introduced in 1787 by the English naturalist John Latham.[12] The genus name combines the Latinpodex meaning "vent" and pes meaning "foot". The specific epithet auritus is Latin meaning "-eared" or "long-eared", and the subspecific name cornutus means "horned".[13]
Description
The species can be recognised by its orange-red and black breeding plumage, its black and white non-breeding plumage, and its characteristic "horns". It is 31–38 cm (12–15 in) long, has a wingspan 55–74 cm (22–29 in) wide and weighs 300–570 g (11–20 oz).[6] It has a moderately long neck, flat forehead and a rear crown of black feathers. Its beak is straight and pointed, with a white tip.
The breeding plumage has bright erectable "horns", black fan-shaped cheek feathers and an overall red-and-black colour. The neck, flanks, lores and upper-chest are chestnut brown, while the crown and back are black. The belly is a dull white. Males are slightly larger and brighter than females but are generally indistinguishable.
The non-breeding plumage is overall black and white. The neck, chest and cheeks are white, while the back and crown are a dull black-grey. The border between the crown and the cheeks extend in a straight line behind the eyes. The winter plumage does not have the "horns".
Juveniles appear similar to a non-breeding adult except they are a slightly duller shade of white and their back is tinged with brown. The line separating the cheeks and crown is less distinct and their beak is paler.[2] The chicks are fluffy, with a dull grey back, a white belly and distinct black-and-white facial and neck striping.
Inshore waters of the Atlantic coast of Europe from Iceland and Norway south to northwestern France, in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, the Black Sea, and the Caspian Sea, and the Pacific coasts of Asia from northern Japan, Korea, south to eastern China.[2]
The subspecies are physically similar in measurements, but differ subtly in plumage, with P. a. auritus darker, having a blacker back and crown, and orange-yellow lateral crown tufts in breeding plumage; and P. a. cornuta paler, with greyer back and crown, and straw-yellow tufts.[4][15]
A third subspecies P. a. arcticus Boie, 1822 has sometimes been accepted for the population in coastal Norway, Iceland, and Scotland,[5] but is now treated as synonymous with nominate P. a. auritus.[4][2]
In winter plumage, it is often confused with the black-necked grebe, which is only slightly smaller in size and has similar colouring but is differentiated by a steeper forehead, a more slender, slightly uptilted bill, duskier cheeks, and a fluffier rump.[4][16]
Vocalisation
Young begin calling for begging purposes in a slightly trilled peeping noise, similar to that of a domestic chick. As they mature, their song changes to a more adult-like chittering.[4] Their typical advertising call is loud and nasally "aaarrh" descending in a pitch and ending in a trill.[17] They use other calls during copulation, alarm and breeding ceremonies that are slightly variable from the advertising call. Horned grebes are extremely vocal during breeding, territory establishment and defence.[6] Their song is subdued during autumn migration and at wintering sites.[17]
Habitat
The species breeds primarily in boreal and subarctic regions with a frost-free period of around 90 days or less,[4] but also in temperate zones, including prairies and parklands.[6] They breed in small to moderately sized (0.5-10 ha) shallow freshwater ponds, marshes and shallow bays on lake edges with beds of emergent vegetation.[16] They prefer lakes less than 2.5 m deep, with submerged vegetation, rather than bare gravel, silt or mud lakefloors,[4] and marginal vegetation with sedgess, rushes, and bulrushes along with large areas of open water.[18] This habitat provides a suitable site for nest material, anchorage, concealment and protection for young. It readily uses lakes surrounded by trees or forest.[4]
During migration, they will stop along lakes, rivers and marshes. Following migration, they winter in marine environments, including off estuaries and bays or sandy beaches; in some places, for example in Norway, large numbers congregate on inland lakes.[5]
Behaviour
Food and feeding
Horned grebes dive underwater using their large feet for agile manoeuvrability to feed on aquatic arthropods, fish and crustaceans.[6] They will also catch airborne insects on the water's surface. Underwater they swallow or capture large prey and re-emerging at the surface to manipulate the fish headfirst.[19] They usually feed solitarily or in small groups of up to five individuals.[19] During the summer, aquatic and airborne arthropods are preferred, whereas winter selection favours fish and crustaceans.[6]
The horned grebe has a unique adaptation for swallowing fish whole. They will eat their own feathers from a young age, so that their stomach has a matted plug that functions as a filter to hold fish bones until digestion.[17]
Breeding
Horned grebes are monogamous and develop their relationship through elaborate mating routines. There are four pair bonding ceremonies; discovery ceremony, weed ceremony, head-shaking ceremony and triumph ceremony.[4][19][20] The discovery ceremony begins with advertising displays, which include an upright posture, erect "horns" and sounding of their advertising call. Then, both male and female engage in bouts of penguin dance and preening. This initial pair bonding ceremony is to ensure correct species identification, sex and compatibility.[19] The weed ceremony follows the completion of a successful discovery ceremony. The male and female will dive, retrieve weeds and rise in synchronisation. The pair will come breast-to-breast with their weeds then turn side by side to continue swimming. This weed-rush can continue multiple times until both individuals are satisfied.[19][20] Finally, the head-shaking ceremony and triumph ceremony are performed for primarily established pairs.[4] Once copulation is to take place, it always occurs on a platform nest built by the pair.[19][20]
Horned grebes usually arrive at breeding grounds in pairs or solitarily to seek out a mate in the spring or early summer.[2] A pair may nest entirely alone or in a loose colony that typically contains approximately 20 breeding pairs, each pair nesting some distance from the others.[6] During nesting, horned grebes are known to defend their nests very aggressively.[20][2] Nests are built from plant matter and are most commonly affixed to emergent vegetation otherwise built on land or in shallow open water.[21] Depending on location the eggs are laid between April and September, with June being the most common month.[2] The females lays a single clutch of three to eight eggs,[21] which are coloured white, brownish or blueish green.[6][17] These eggs measure 58 by 39 millimetres (2.3 by 1.5 in) on average.[22] Both males and females share incubation time for 22 to 25 days.[2][21] When the young hatch, they can swim and dive within the first few days, although they must be kept warm by their parents for up to 14 days.[6] During this time, the juvenile chicks can often be seen riding on the backs of their swimming parents right in-between the wing and the back.[17] Later the horned grebe will take their first flight at 55–60 days old.[23] The species finally reaches sexual maturity at two years old.[2]
Conservation status
The total North American population is estimated at between 200,000 and 500,000 individuals[16] and the Eurasian population at 12,900 to 18,500 mature individuals.[3] The global population has declined by 30% over the last three decades and by 79% within North America.[16] This is due primarily to human disturbance, forestry operations around breeding sites, fluctuating water levels, and stocking of lakes with rainbow trout that compete for aquatic insects.[2] They are also frequently caught in nets, vulnerable to oil spills and diseases.[16][2] Between 1985 and 2001, grassland and wetland drainage amounted to 5% global habitat loss.[16] The western Canadian population is listed as being of special concern and the breeding population on Magdalen Islands is listed as endangered.[16] Due to global declines, the International Union for Conservation of Nature uplisted the status from least concern to vulnerable in 2015, resulting in conservation and research action plans.[3] The small population in northern Scotland is in severe decline, with only 26 pairs in 2021, a decline of 58% over the previous 26 years.[24]
Fossils
A handful of fossil species, such as the Pliocene aged P. howardae, P. pisanus and P. solidus, and the Pleistocene aged P. dixi have been described to be related to or perhaps some of them might be pre-Holocene material of the horned grebe.[25][26][27] However while P. howardae and P. dixi are regularly recognized as fossil material of the horned grebe by some authors, P. pisanus and P. solidus are argued to be valid species that are close to the ancestry of the horned grebe.[28]
^ abcdefghijkCramp, Stanley (1977). Handbook of the Birds of Europe, the Middle East and North Africa: Volume 1 Ostrich to ducks. Oxford London New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 97–105. ISBN0-19-857358-8.
^Lockwood, W. B. (1984). Oxford Book of British Bird Names. Oxford University Press.
^Hartert, Ernst; Jourdain, F. C. R.; Ticehurst, Norman F. (1912). A hand-list of British birds, with an account of the distribution of each species in the British Isles and abroad. London: Witherby. p. 157. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.8013.
^Zelenkov, N. V. (2013). "New finds and revised taxa of Early Pliocene birds from Western Mongolia.". In Göhlich, U. B.; Kroh, A. (eds.). Paleornithological Research 2013-Proceedings of the 8th International Meeting of the Society of Avian Paleontology and Evolution. Natural History Museum Vienna, Vienna. pp. 153–170.