ML070720626

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Adw Chlidonias Niger Information
ML070720626
Person / Time
Site: Susquehanna  Talen Energy icon.png
Issue date: 03/07/2007
From:
University of Michigan
To:
Office of Nuclear Reactor Regulation
ALICIA MULLINS 301-415-1224
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ADW: Chlidonias niger: Information Structured Inquiry Search preview Home Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Subphylum Vertebrata Class Aves Order Charadriiformes Family Laridae Species Chlidonias niger Chlidonias niger (black tern)

Information Pictures Classification 2007/03/04 08:59:56.152 US/Eastern By Stephanie Null Kingdom: Animalia Geographic Range Phylum: Chordata Subphylum: Vertebrata The black tern can be found from central eastern Alaska, central Manitoba and Class: Aves Ontario south to northern California, Colorado, northern Missouri and Tennessee, also Order: Charadriiformes to the lakeshores of northern Ohio, Pennsylvania and New York; winters spent from Surinam to Peru and Chile. Forbush & May, 1955. Family: Laridae Genus: Chlidonias Biogeographic Regions: Species: Chlidonias niger nearctic (native ); neotropical (native ).

Habitat The preferred summer habitats of the black tern are inland marshes and sloughs with fairly dense cattail or other marsh vegetation and pockets of open water. These wetlands are often shallow in nature. Its winter home is on the coasts of South America and it appears in considerable numbers on the South Atlantic and Gulf coast of North America during its periodic migrations, but all other times it a bird of the interior. Forbush & May, 1955; http://www.npsc.nbs.gov/

resource/distr/others/nddanger/species/chlinige.htm Terrestrial Biomes:

savanna or grassland .

Aquatic Biomes:

lakes and ponds; rivers and streams.

Physical Description This bird has an approximate length of 9 to 10.25 inches and a wing spread of about 25 inches. In breeding season, this tern has a black head, neck and underparts with generally dark plumage. In the fall, it becomes lighter with gray wings.

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ADW: Chlidonias niger: Information The young are a grayish-white color with dark patches on either side of their head. The tail is small and is only slightly notched compared with other terns. Its bill is very sharp and slender, shorter than the head; wings are long and pointed; and feet are webbed only to the middle of the toes. Forbush & May, 1955.

Some key physical features:

endothermic ; bilateral symmetry .

Reproduction The black terns's courtship ritual is elaborate with much flying. Males often fly with fish in their mouth to attract females.

They nest in small colonies in upland marshes and sloughs. Their nests can be found on muskrat bouse or floating masses of dead plants, usually over water 4 to 34 inches deep. The typical nest has 3 eggs that are laid from May to early August. Incubation lasts 22 days. The successful hatching rates of nests is very low because of predation and other disturbances. The young terns that do hatch leave the nests very early often swimming first, but flying within 24 days.

Black terns do not breed until fully mature at two years of age. http://www.npsc.nbs.gov/resource/distr/others/

nddanger/species/chlinige.htm)

Key reproductive features:

iteroparous ; gonochoric/gonochoristic/dioecious (sexes separate); sexual  ; oviparous .

Behavior This species is quite gregarious and usually nests in colonies; in its migrations the birds gather in large flocks. Its flight is bouyant and erratic. They are often observed hovering above marshes. When feeding, it circles low over foraging areas with slow, shallow wingbeats and its bill pointed down. The bird may then hover briefly before a sudden drop or swoop to the surface, next it dips its bill into the water or picks an insect off vegetation. These birds have even been recorded chasing minnows cast by fishermen. Parents are very solicitous when their home is approached. They dart about screaming and make angry swoops at the head of the intruder, often striking hard with their bills. The young remain well to the south, not migrating north to any considerable extent until fully mature. Pearson, 1936; Dunn & Agro, 1995.

Key behaviors:

motile .

Food Habits During the breeding season, these birds eat insects and freshwater fish such as damselflies and dragonflies, grubs and larvae and other small mollusks. The rest of the year, meals are usually of small marine fish. Some examples are anchovies, silversides and plankton. The average fish taken during breeding season is 2.5 to 3.0 cm and 3 grams. Dunn

& Argo, 1995.

Economic Importance for Humans: Negative Humans approaching the nest of a black tern may come with a serious headache because these birds have been known to attack humans that come too close. Pearson, 1936.

Economic Importance for Humans: Positive Black terns feed on insects that may be potentially harmful to humans.

Conservation Status IUCN Red List: [link]:

As of February 28, 1996, the black tern is no longer a candidate species. There is no legal Least concern.

requirement to help candidate species, however it is in the spirit of the Endangered Species Act to consider these species as having significant value and to be worth protecting. Candidate species are species which may warrant official listing as endangered US Migratory Bird Act:

or threatened; however data are not conclusive at the present time. The continuing loss [link]:

of habitat due to wetland drainage is the main reason for the decline in black tern Protected.

populations. Reduced hatching success in the midwestern United States may be due to http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Chlidonias_niger.html (2 of 4)3/7/2007 11:29:21 AM

ADW: Chlidonias niger: Information agricultural pesticides. It has been recommended that marshes and sloughs used annually US Federal List: [link]:

by black terns be protected for the birds and other wetland values. Black terns are a No special status.

species of special concern in Michigan. http://www.npsc.nbs.gov/resource/distr/others/

nddanger/species/chlinige.htm. CITES: [link]:

No special status.

Other Comments State of Michigan List:

[link]:

The blakc tern has been reported from the Pleistocene in dry lake beds of Fossil Lake, Special Concern.

Lake Co., Oregon. Other names for the black tern are short-tailed tern, semipalmated tern and sea pigeon. Dunn & Agro, 1995; Forbush & May, 1955.

Contributors Stephanie Null (author), University of Michigan.

References Dunn, E.H. and Agro, D.J. 1995. The Birds of North America, No.147 (Excerpts). http://www.acnatsci.org/bna/excerpts/

blktern.html.

Forbush, E.H and May, J.B. 1955. A Natural History of American Birds of Eastern and Central Notrh America.

Commonwealth of Massachusetts, U.S.A.

North Dakota's Federally Listed Edangered, Threatened and Candidate Species. 1995. http://www.npsc.nbs.gov/resource/

distr/others/nddanger/species/chlinige.htm.

Pearson, G.T. 1936. Birds of America. Garden City Books, New York.

2007/03/04 08:59:57.393 US/Eastern To cite this page: Null, S. 1999. "Chlidonias niger" (On-line), Animal Diversity Web. Accessed March 07, 2007 at http://

animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Chlidonias_niger.html.

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