Sunday, April 29, 2012

>Aethia cristatella (Crested Auklet)

Crested Auklet

Crested Auklet
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Aves
Order:Charadriiformes
Family:Alcidae
Genus:Aethia
Species:A. cristatella
Binomial name
Aethia cristatella
(Pallas, 1769)
The Crested Auklet (Aethia cristatella) is a small seabird of the family Alcidae which nests in huge colonies (>1 million individuals) in the Bering Sea and Sea of Okhotsk. They often breed in mixed-species colonies with Least Auklets, their smaller congener.
The Crested Auklet can measure 18–27 cm (7.1–11 in) in length, 34–50 cm (13–20 in) in wingspan and weigh 195–330 g (6.9–12 oz). It is recognized primarily by two characters in the breeding season. The first is its 'crest', a group of bristle feathers located above its eye on the top of its head. The second is a social odor that the auklets produce during the breeding season, which has been described as smelling like tangerines.
Crested Auklets are planktivores. Their diet consists mainly of krill, but they are also known to eat copepodspteropods (such as Limacina), amphipods and larval fishes. Their main predators areHerring Gulls and other gullsArctic Fox and ravens, but they have been reported in the stomachs of halibut caught on St. Lawrence Island.


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