- •Introduction
- •Verreaux’s sifaka
- •Identification: Males reach 8–10 feet in length and have a massive neck, shoulders, and mane; females are smaller.
- •Identification: a large deer (standing 4-5 feet at the shoulder) with brownish red fur and a pale rump patch; males generally have enormous antlers and a long mane.
- •Identification: a 3-4-foot-tall deer with a brownish coat and large antlers (3 feet long) in males.
- •Identification: a medium-sized deer typically with a grayish brown coat and white underparts, and antlers in both sexes. Moose
- •Identification : The largest species of deer (weighing up to 1,300 pounds); has slender legs, a pendulous nose, and (in males) prominent palmate antlers and a dewlap or “bell” beneath the throat.
- •Identification: The tallest mammal (up to 19 feet), with a sloping back, enormously long neck, bony, knobbed “horns” in both sexes, and the familiar reddish brown spotted patterning.
- •Identification: a deer-sized mammal with distinctive, sharply forked horns in males and reddish brown fur with white patches.
- •Identification: a medium-sized gazelle; males have distinctive spiral horns and a black-and-white coat; females and juvenile males are tan colored.
- •Identification: a large wild sheep (weighing up to 300 pounds) with massive spiral horns in males; coat is brown with a white muzzle, underparts, and rump patch.
- •Identification: Similar to Bighorn, except smaller and with thinner horns; coat is all white or brownish black to gray,
- •Identification: a large (6—8—foot—long) mammal with long, shaggy fur, humped shoulders, and massive, down-sweeping horns.
- •Identification: a stocky, 3-foot-tall, goatlike mammal with shaggy white fur and sharp horns in both sexes.
- •Identification: An enormous buffalo (up to 61/2 feet high) with massive forequarters, humped shoulders, and (in males) a beard.
- •Identification: Similar to American Bison but more slender, less hunched, and with longer legs.
- •Identification: a huge (II-foot-long), usually black buffalo with massive, upward-curving horns in both sexes.
- •Identification: The familiar wild horse with a black-and-white-striped pattern; Mountain Zebras usually have a distinctive dewlap.
- •Identification: a 3—5-foot-long wild pig with a large head, prominent tusks, and distinctive warts in front of the eyes and on the jaw..
- •Identification: a piglike mammal with grayish, speckled, or salt-and-pepper fur and a light-colored collar.
- •Identification: The familiar large (up to 71/2 tons), trunked mammal with enormous ears and tusks in both sexes.
- •Identification: a large wild cat (up to 550 pounds) with a prominent mane in males.
- •Identification: a small canid (body length up to 3 feet) with a bushy tail and a reddish brown coat (although some variants are silvery or black).
- •Identification: The largest wild canid (reaching up to 7 feet in length) with a gray, brown, black, or white coat.
- •Identification: a small (3 foot long), reddish brown, bearlike canid with short legs and tail. Social Organization
- •Identification: a huge bear (7–10 feet tall) with dark brown, golden, cream, or black fur..
- •Identification: a smaller bear (4–6 feet) with coat color ranging from black to gray, brown, and even white. Park, Saskatchewan, Canada; subspecies u.A. Altifrontalis.
- •Identification: a yellowish brown hyena with spotted flanks and back, a strongly sloping body profile, and rounded ears; females typically heavier than males.
- •Identification: a large (over 3 foot tall) kangaroo with a gray coat and a hair-covered muzzle.
- •Identification: a smaller kangaroo (21/2 feet tall) with a reddish brown wash on its neck.
- •Identification: a light gray kangaroo standing up to 3 feet tall, with a white facial stripe and a long, slender tail.
- •Identification: a small (6–7 pound), rodentlike kangaroo with reddish brown fur.
- •Identification: Stocky, tree-dwelling kangaroos; chestnut or chocolate brown fur with lighter patches.
- •Identification: a small, mouselike marsupial with a thick, conical, fat-storing tail.
- •Identification: a catlike marsupial, up to 2 feet long, with grayish brown fur and white splotches.
- •Identification: a medium-sized (10—15 inch), primarily tree-dwelling squirrel with a reddish brown or tawny coat and white underparts, often with a dark stripe on the side.
- •Identification: a large (20 inch), tree-dwelling squirrel with a long, bushy tail and gray, grizzled, or buff fur.
- •Identification: Small, guinea-pig-like rodents with coarse fur; Dwarf Cavies have a distinctive white eye-ring, Cuis have yellow-colored incisors.
- •Identification: a small (less than I foot long) insectivore with sandy-colored spines, white underparts, and prominent ears.
- •Identification: a dark gray goose with fine silvery-white feather patterning; the wild ancestor of domestic geese.
- •Identification: a brown-plumaged goose with a distinctive black neck and white cheek patch; varies widely in size, from 2–24 pounds.
- •Identification: a pinkish-red-billed goose with two major color phases: all-white and “blue” (grayish plumage with a white head and neck).
- •Identification: The only swan with fully black plumage; wing feathers are white, bill is bright red, and the neck is especially long.
- •Identification: a large swan (up to 33 pounds) with a black knob at the base of its reddish orange bill (less prominent in females).
- •Identification: a familiar duck with a blue wing patch, an iridescent green head and white collar in males, and brown, mottled plumage in females.
- •Identification: a grayish brown duck with a light blue upper-wing patch, tawny spotted underparts, and white, crescent-shaped facial stripes in males.
- •Identification: a broad-billed duck with a purplish black head and breast and white underparts in males, and a dark head and brownish plumage in females.
- •Identification: Cinnamon breast, dark green head and back, and white collar; adult females have white eye and bill rings.
- •Identification: a large, grayish duck with a prominent lobe hanging from the lower bill, and a spike-fan tail..
- •Identification: a gull-sized, web-footed bird with contrasting black upperparts and white underparts; some individuals have a white eye ring.
- •Identification: a large, white-plumaged, gull-like bird with an enorous wingspan (over 61/2 feet), a dark back, and a grayish black wash on the face.
- •Identification: a large (3 foot), black, web-footed bird with a white throat and white filamentary plumes on the nape.
- •Identification: Similar to Great Cormorant, but smaller and uniformly black, with a prominent forehead crest.
- •Identification: a ducklike bird with grayish white plumage, bright red eyes, and yellow facial tufts.
- •Identification: Similar to Silvery Grebe, but with a buff or chestnut wash on the breast, white streaks on the head, and black-and-white eyes.
- •Identification: a stocky, medium-sized (2 foot long) heron with a black crown and back, white underparts, gray wings, and white ribbon plumes at the nape of the neck.
- •Identification: Long-legged, typically white herons with ornamental, filamentous plumes on the back, breast, and nape; these are golden-buff-colored in the Cattle Egret.
- •Identification: Similar to Little Egret but with slaty-gray plumage and a reddish brown head and neck.
- •Identification: a large (3 foot long) heron with a gray back, white head and neck, and black “eyebrow” stripe and nape plumes.
- •Identification: a large (nearly 20 inch) wading bird with bluish purple plumage, a red shield on its forehead, and red feet with long toes.
- •Identification: Similar to Pukeko, but flightless, and with grayish brown plumage, no red frontal shield, and shorter legs.
- •Identification: Similar to Pukeko, but with black plumage and shorter legs.
- •Identification: The largest flamingo species (4—5 feet tall) with plumage ranging from pale whitish pink to bright orange-pink.
- •Identification: a large (12 inch) sandpiper with gray or brownish plumage and, in some males, spectacular ruffs and feather tufts on the head that vary widely in color and pattern (see below).
- •Identification: a medium-sized (7—8 inch) wading bird with a small head and short beak, buff-colored face and underparts, and regular dark brown patterning on the back and crown.
- •Identification: a large (13—14 inch) sandpiper with streaked and spotted, dark brownish gray plumage; long and slightly upturned bill; greenish yellow legs.
- •Identification: Slightly smaller than the Greenshank; plumage grayish brown, with black and dark brown streaks and spots; orange-red legs.
- •Identification: a fairly large (12—15 inch) sandpiper-like bird with long pink legs, white plumage with black wings and back, and a slender black bill.
- •Identification: Similar to Black-winged Stilt but with entirely black plumage.
- •Identification: a medium-sized (10 inch) sandpiper-like bird with mottled buff and black plumage; adult males have a black face and underparts bordered with white.
- •Identification: a large gull (up to 27 inches) with a dark gray back and wings; spotted black-and-white wing tips; pink legs; and a yellow bill with a red spot.
- •Identification: a smaller gull (to 17 inches) with a blue-gray mantle; more pointed black wing tips; relatively short black legs and dark eyes; and a yellowish green bill.
- •Identification: a medium-sized (16 inch) gull with gray back and wings; spotted black-and-white wing tips; bright red bill and legs; white iris.
- •Identification: Similar to Silver Gull except larger (2 feet long), legs pinkish, bill yellow with a red spot, and iris yellow.
- •Identification: a medium-sized gull (to 17 inches) with a distinctive black or chocolate brown “hood,” red legs, and a gray back and wings.
- •Identification: a medium-sized (to 18 inches) black-headed gull with white eye-crescents, a dark gray back, and red legs and bill..
- •Ivory gull
- •Identification: An all-white gull with black legs and a blue-gray bill.
- •Identification: a large (to 22 inches) gull-like bird with a black cap and crest, light gray back and wings, forked tail, and long red bill with a black tip.
- •Identification: Similar to Caspian Tern but smaller (to 17 inches) and with a more deeply forked tail and slighter bill.
- •IdentifIfAtion: a crow-sized bird with cinnamon-brown plumage and a bare, blue-gray face..
- •Identification: Adult males are black with a red crown and a light blue patch on the back; yearling males and females are all green, while younger adult males are green with a reddish crown..
- •Identification: Small (5–7 inch) birds with brown and rufous plumage and a bluish gray patch around the eyes; Ocellateds have a distinctive scalloped pattern on the back feathers.
- •Identification: a small (5 inch), plain olive-green bird with a long tail and an ocher- or tawny-colored lower breast.
- •Identification: a small to medium-sized swallow with iridescent blue-green upperparts, white underparts, and a tail that is only slightly forked.
- •Identification: a bluish brown swallow with pale underparts, buff forehead, and a chestnut throat; tail is not forked..
- •Identification: a small, sparrow-sized swallow with a slightly forked tail, brown plumage, white underparts, and a brown breast band.
- •Identification: a small songbird with bright yellow underparts, olive green upperparts, and a black crown (“hood”) and throat in adult males and some females (see below).
- •Identification: a sparrow-sized bird with olive-brown plumage, distinctive white shoulder bars, and (in males) blue-gray crown.
- •Identification: a sparrow-sized bird with olive to orange-red plumage and a distinctive crossed bill..
- •Identification: a small (61/2 inch) bird with a thick, hooked bill, grayish brown plumage, and a darker facial mask (black in males)..
- •Identification: a tiny (41/2 inch) chickadee-like bird with a bright blue crown, black-and-white face, bluish green plumage, and yellow underparts.
- •Identification: a sparrow-sized bird with bright blue plumage, white underparts, and a chestnut throat and breast.
- •Identification: a grayish buff, sparrow-sized bird with a pale gray-white crown..
- •Identification: a drab, sparrowlike bird with brownish gray plumage and a black throat patch..
- •Identification: The familiar black-bibbed sparrow; Cowbird is iridescent black with a dark brown head..
- •Identification: Light gray plumage, black wings and tail, and (in some birds) bare yellow head and fleshy black wattles.
- •Identification: a small crow with black plumage and gray on the back of the head.
- •Identification: a large (2 foot), all-black bird similar to a crow but much bulkier..
- •Victoria’s riflebird
- •Identification: Adult males are black with an iridescent sheen and metallic crown, throat, and central tail feathers; females and younger males are drabber, with brown, buff, and off-white plumage.
- •Identification: a thrush-sized bird (12 inches) with velvety black plumage and brilliant golden yellow crown, nape, upper back, and wing feathers.
- •Identification: a pheasant-sized bird with brownish gray plumage, powerful legs and claws, and long, ornate tail feathers.
- •Identification: The largest living bird (over 6 feet tall), with striking black-and-white plumage in the male and powerful legs and claws.
- •Identification: The second-largest living bird (5—6 feet tall), with shaggy, brown plumage and bare patches of blue skin on the face and neck.
- •Identification: Similar to Ostrich but smaller (up to 41/2 feet tall) and with overall grayish brown plumage in both sexes.
- •Identification: a small penguin (approximately 2 feet tall) with a black band on its chest and patches of red skin at the base of its bill..
- •Identification: a large (3 foot tall) penguin with orange ear patches and a yellow-orange wash on the breast.
- •Identification: a medium-sized penguin (up to 21/2 feet) with a white patch above the eye.
- •Identification: a large vulture (wingspan up to 9 feet) with a white head and neck and brown plumage.
- •Insects
- •Introduction
Identification: Long-legged, typically white herons with ornamental, filamentous plumes on the back, breast, and nape; these are golden-buff-colored in the Cattle Egret.
LITTLE BLUE HERON
Identification: Similar to Little Egret but with slaty-gray plumage and a reddish brown head and neck.
GRAY HERON
Identification: a large (3 foot long) heron with a gray back, white head and neck, and black “eyebrow” stripe and nape plumes.
Social Organization
Herons and Egrets are highly social birds, nesting in dense colonies that may include birds of several different species. During the mating season the primary social unit is the monogamous pair, although several alternative mating systems occur (see below). Outside of the breeding season, they may be found either singly or in flocks.
Description
Behavioral Expression: In all four of these Heron and Egret species, males that are paired to females often copulate with birds other than their mates; in some cases, these involve homosexual copulations with other males who are themselves also paired to females. Homosexual mountings always take place during the mating season. In Little Egrets, mountings between males are most common during the early stages of heterosexual pair formation (before nest-building begins), while in Little Blue Herons at least some homosexual activity takes place during the incubation period, since males have been seen mounting other males that are sitting on eggs. Typically, males mount birds in neighboring nests, although in Little Egrets and Little Blue Herons males may travel to other areas of the breeding colony to engage in “extramarital” or promiscuous copulations (both homosexual and heterosexual).
In Cattle Egrets (and probably the other species as well), homosexual mountings always take place on the mountee’s nest. In a typical encounter, the male seeking an “extramarital” liaison approaches another male, uttering RICK RACK calls (a harsh double croaking sound, also used in heterosexual encounters). The first male then mounts the other bird and crouches on his back; some males only act as mounters in homosexual copulations, others only as mountees, while some males perform both roles. In Little Blue Herons and Cattle Egrets, homosexual mountings may also occur when one male mounts another male who is himself attempting to copulate with a female; sometimes, “pile-ups” of three or four males on top of each other may develop in this way. Usually the mountee is aggressive toward the male mounting him and does not permit cloacal contact. Similarly, male-female “extramarital” copulations are rarely completed, owing to resistance by the female or defense by her mate. In Cattle Egrets, nearly a quarter of all such heterosexual mounting attempts do not involve cloacal contact, while in Little Egrets more than 85 percent of such opposite-sex copulations are “incomplete.”
Frequency: Homosexual mountings can be quite common: in Little Egrets, for example, more than 100 mounts between males were recorded over four months in one colony, with such copulations comprising 5—6 percent of all “extramarital” sexual activity. In Little Blue Herons, homosexual mountings make up 3—6 percent of all copulations outside the pair-bond. Mounts between males represent 5 percent of “extramarital” copulations and 3 percent of all copulations in Cattle Egrets, while in Gray Herons they constitute 8 percent of all promiscuous mountings and 1 percent of the total number of copulations. In 18 percent of “extramarital” copulation attempts on female Cattle Egrets, additional males mount other males in a pile-up.
Orientation: Since males that participate in homosexual activity almost always have female mates, they are technically bisexual (and some birds may even participate in “group” sexual activity involving both males and females simultaneously, as in Little Blue Herons). In Little Egrets, about one-quarter of the male population engages in homosexual mounting, in Gray Herons 5—7 percent of males are involved in such activity, while in Cattle Egrets six out of ten males in one colony participated in same-sex mounting. Some individuals seem to show more of a “predilection” for homosexual behavior than others. In Cattle Egrets, for example, certain males engage in “extramarital” mountings only with males rather than females, while in both this species and in Little Egrets, some individuals participate in same-sex activity noticeably more often than others. In addition, homosexual activity comprises a greater proportion of “extramarital” sexual activity for some males than for others.
Nonreproductive and Alternative Heterosexualities
As described above, “extramarital” or promiscuous heterosexual copulations occur commonly in all four of these species. In Cattle Egrets, as many as 60 percent of all mountings are by males on females other than their mates, while in Gray Herons such matings account for more than 12 percent of all sexual activity. Nearly a third of all Little Egret copulations are promiscuous. In fact, many copulations in this context are actually rapes, since the female is not a willing participant (although in both Cattle and Little Egrets, females may also consent to such matings). Up to 7 percent of Cattle Egret eggs may be fertilized by a male other than the bird’s (social) father; however, many “extramarital” copulations are nonprocreative, since almost a quarter of all such matings take place when the female is already incubating her eggs. In addition to stepparenting of birds fathered by other males, several other alternative family arrangements occur: Cattle Egret trios of two females and one male may raise a family, while foster-parenting sometimes occurs when females lay their eggs in nests of other birds, including other species of Egrets and Herons.
Several mating behaviors in these species indicate that not all aspects of heterosexuality revolve around breeding. Cattle Egrets sometimes mate when fertilization is not possible, for example during incubation or chick-raising. And up to 14 percent of copulations between pair members may be “incomplete” in the sense that no genital contact or sperm transfer occurs—sometimes because the male is apparently not “interested” in mating even though his female partner is. In Little Blue Herons, some males copulate with females and yet remain “single” (i.e., do not pair-bond with them), while other males never pair with a female during the entire mating season. REVERSE mounts (females mounting males) also occur in Cattle Egrets, and in polygamous trios this sometimes results in a “pile-up” of three birds (one female mounting the second female who is mounting the male).
A number of violent and counterreproductive behaviors can make life harsh for young Egrets and Herons. In Little Blue Herons, infidelity often leads to abandonment of the nest by one or both partners (in part because eggs may be broken during the promiscuous sexual activity). Following a partner’s injury, male Cattle Egrets have been known to destroy their own eggs and desert their mates for a new female. Male Gray Herons also occasionally destroy their eggs by stabbing at them. Nest and mate desertion (especially by females) are common in Little Egrets as well. Often the remaining bird will successfully raise the chicks as a single parent; sometimes, though, the chicks die as a result of desertion. If a single father pairs with a new female, she may kill his nestlings by pecking them to death, so that she can mate with him and raise her own offspring. Cannibalism by siblings or parents sometimes occurs in Gray Herons. In addition, Heron and Egret families are often systematically “pared down” because the youngest nestlings starve to death when they are unable to compete for food; more than three-quarters of all nestling deaths in Little Blue Herons are the result of such “brood reduction.”
PUKEKO
