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Brandt's Cormorant

 

Phalacrocorax penicillatus

TAXONOMY

Carbo penicillatus Brandt, 1837, no locality. Monotypic.

OTHER COMMON NAMES

English: Brown's cormorant, Townsend's cormorant; French: Cormoran de Brandt; German: Pinselscharbe; Spanish: Cormorán Sargento.

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS

Body length of 29 in (74 cm), with a grayish bill, blue cheek pouch, yellow throat patch, glossy blackish plumage, and black legs and feet.

DISTRIBUTION

Occurs along the Pacific coast of North America, from southern Alaska to Baja California.

HABITAT

Nests in trees and feeds in coastal waters.

BEHAVIOR

A social species that breeds in colonies and aggregates in flocks.

FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET

Feeds on small fish, squid, and crustaceans.

REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY

Lays three to four eggs in a crude stick-nest, with both sexes sharing the incubation and rearing of the chick. One or two chicks per nest normally fledge.

CONSERVATION STATUS

Not threatened. Abundant over much of its range.

SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS

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Western Bird Guide: brandt's cormorant
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Phalacrocorax penicillatus 33-35″ (83-88 cm). Size of Double-crest, but with a dark throat pouch (blue when breeding). Buffy brown band across throat behind pouch. If a young cormorant has a whitish breast it is a Double-crest; if the breast is buffy or pale brown with a pale Y it is most likely a Brandt's. If deep rich brown below, it is a Pelagic.

Range: Pacific Coast of N. America. Map .

Habitat: Ocean, coast, littoral; nests colonially on sea cliffs.


Wikipedia: Brandt's Cormorant
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Brandt's Cormorant

Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Pelecaniformes
Family: Phalacrocoracidae
Genus: Phalacrocorax
Species: P. penicillatus
Binomial name
Phalacrocorax penicillatus
(Brandt, 1837)

The Brandt's Cormorant (Phalacrocorax penicillatus) is a strictly marine bird of the cormorant family of seabirds that inhabits the Pacific coast of North America. It ranges, in the summer, from Alaska to the Gulf of California, but the population north of Vancouver Island migrates south during the winter. Its specific name, penicillatus is Latin for a painter's brush (pencil of hairs), in reference to white plumes on its neck and back during the early breeding season. The common name honors the German naturalist Johann Friedrich von Brandt of the Academy of Sciences at St. Petersburg, who described the species from specimens collected on expeditions to the Pacific during the early 1800s.

Brandt's Cormorants feed either singly or in flocks, and are adaptable in prey choice and undersea habitat. It feeds on small fish from the surface to sea floor, obtaining them, like all cormorants, by pursuit diving using its feet for propulsion. Prey is often what is most common: in central California, rockfish from the genus Sebastes is the most commonly taken, but off British Columbia, it is Pacific Herring. Brandt's Cormorant have been observed foraging at depths of over 40 feet.

During the breeding season, adults have a blue throat patch. This species nests on the ground or on rocky outcroppings.

Adult

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Animal Encyclopedia. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Western Bird Guide. Peterson Field Guide to Western Birds, by Roger Tory Peterson. Copyright © 1990 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Brandt's Cormorant" Read more