One
of the many exciting things about working in a zoo all summer is that you get
to see the baby animals growing up every day. I got to work at Stone Zoo with WBS’s educational bird show
last summer, so I saw first-hand many youngsters grow up.
While
most young animals are off exhibit until they reach a certain age, the
flamingos build their nests, lay eggs, and raise their young in full view of
the public. This year six American Flamingos hatched at the Stone Zoo
near Boston. During our many
visits to see these adorable little fuzzy flamingos, we realized that while
almost everyone recognizes these birds as flamingos, many inquisitive kids (and
adults) would like to know more about them.
There
are actually six species of flamingos found around the world--in Africa,
Europe, Asia, Central and South America, the Caribbean islands and occasionally
southern Florida. They can be
found living in the tropics or mountains, but always near shallow brackish
waters such as lagoons, swamps, marshes, estuaries, and mudflats where they
find their food. Flamingos are
filter feeders and filter tasty blue and green algae, mollusks, crustaceans,
plankton, insects, small fish, and seeds from the mud and water.
The
flamingo's pink color actually comes from the carotenoids in the food they
eat. Their unique downward bent
beak is well adapted for filtering food out of the water and is lined with rows
of hair-like lamellae for capturing their food. The beak, and sometimes the entire head, is dipped into the
water upside down and swept back and forth to filter the food out. By using their spiny tongue as a pump,
water is sucked in and pushed back out across the lamellae as fast 4 to 20
times a second, depending on the species.
The
flamingos' long legs and necks allow them to feed in deeper waters. They sometimes use their webbed feet to
stomp around in the water and bring the food off the bottom and closer to the
surface where it can be filtered more easily. The webbed feet also help flamingos stand on soft mud and
make them excellent swimmers in water that
is too deep to wade.
While
flamingos are most often seen standing in shallow water feeding and preening,
they are also good fliers.
However, flamingos need a running start in order to take off, explaining
why most of the flamingos at the zoo are fully flighted even though the
enclosure has no roof.
Flamingos
are very social birds and form colonies of a few dozen to over a million
individuals. Larger colonies split
up for the breeding season. These
colonies perform synchronized displays such as marching, wing salutes, and head
flagging. Individuals pair up for
the breeding season and form strong pair bonds.
Both
parents assist with the building of the nest, which is constructed by pulling
mouthfuls of mud, pebbles, feathers, and other nearby material up into a mound.
This mound is built up until it is high enough so that the egg won't be washed
away during a flood and is protected from the heat of the ground. This can be a few inches or a foot high
and has a slight indentation on the top to prevent the single egg from rolling
out. The parents are very
territorial of their nest, which is usually located just out of reach of the
neighboring nests. Both parents
take turns incubating the egg for about 26-31 days.
When
the egg hatches, the chick is white and fuzzy with a straight pink beak and
pink legs. At the zoo, the chicks
were standing up at about two days old.
Within a week, the chicks began to leave the nest and their pink legs
and beak turned black. At this
point in the wild, fledglings would group up into microcreches and then later
larger creches of thousands of other chicks for protection from predators.
During these first few weeks, the chick's beak is not developed enough for
feeding on its own, so food is provided by both parents in the form of crop
milk. This reddish milk is
secreted by the upper digestive tract and is high in protein and fat.
By
about eleven weeks, the hatchlings grow in brown juvenile plumage and their beaks
gradually begin to get their characteristic bend and lamellae. Juvenile flamingos get their bright
pink adult plumage gradually between 2 and 4 years of age. Males and females
look the same, but males are slightly larger. Flamingos live about 20-30 years
in the wild, but in captivity, they can live to be 50 or older.
At
the Stone Zoo each juvenile flamingo was given a unique identification band
when they were old enough. It has
been quite exciting to watch these six flamingos grow up this summer!
1 comment:
My very first research paper, way back in the fourth grade, was about flamingos. I've loved them ever since. What a fun blog--thank you for featuring my favorite bird! :)
Post a Comment