Auk
Auks | |
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Parakeet auklets (Aethia psittacula) | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Chordata |
Class: | Aves |
Order: | Charadriiformes |
Suborder: | Lari |
Family: | Alcidae Leach, 1820 |
Type species | |
Subfamilies | |
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An auk or alcid is a bird of the family Alcidae in the order Charadriiformes.[1] The alcid family includes the murres, guillemots, auklets, puffins, and murrelets. The family contains 25 extant or recently extinct species that are divided into 11 genera.[1][2]
Apart from the extinct great auk, all auks can fly, and are excellent swimmers and divers (appearing to "fly" in water), but their walking appears clumsy.
Names
Several species have different English names in Europe and North America. The two species known as "murres" in North America are called "guillemots" in Europe, and the species called little auk in Europe is referred to as dovekie in North America.
Etymology
The word "auk"
Taxonomy
The family name Alcidae comes from the genus Alca given by Carl Linnaeus in 1758 for the razorbill (Alca torda) from the Norwegian word alke.[5]
Description
Auks are superficially similar to penguins, having black-and-white colours, upright posture, and some of their habits. Nevertheless, they are not closely related to penguins, but rather are believed to be an example of moderate convergent evolution. Auks are monomorphic (males and females are similar in appearance).
Extant auks range in size from the least auklet, at 85 g (3 oz) and 15 cm (5.9 in), to the thick-billed murre, at 1 kg (2.2 lb) and 45 cm (18 in). Due to their short wings, auks have to flap their wings very quickly to fly.
Although not to the extent of penguins, auks have largely sacrificed flight, and also mobility on land, in exchange for swimming ability; their wings are a compromise between the best possible design for diving and the bare minimum needed for flying. This varies by subfamily, with the Uria guillemots (including the razorbill) and murrelets being the most efficient under the water, whereas the puffins and auklets are better adapted for flying and walking.
Feeding and ecology
The feeding behaviour of auks is often compared to that of penguins; both groups are wing-propelled, pursuit divers. In the region where auks live, their only seabird competition are cormorants (which are dive-powered by their strong feet). In areas where the two groups feed on the same prey, the auks tend to feed further offshore. Strong-swimming murres hunt faster, schooling fish, whereas auklets take slower-moving krill. Time depth recorders on auks have shown that they can dive as deep as 100 m (330 ft) in the case of Uria guillemots, 40 m (130 ft) for the Cepphus guillemots and 30 m (98 ft) for the auklets.
Breeding and colonies
Auks are pelagic birds, spending the majority of their adult lives on the open sea and going ashore only for breeding, although some species, such as the common guillemot, spend a great part of the year defending their nesting spot from others.
Auks are monogamous, and tend to form lifelong pairs. They typically lay a single egg, and they use the nesting site year after year.
Some species, such as the Uria guillemots (murres), nest in large colonies on cliff edges; others, such as the Cepphus guillemots, breed in small groups on rocky coasts; and the puffins, auklets, and some murrelets nest in burrows. All species except the Brachyramphus murrelets are colonial.
Evolution and distribution
Traditionally, the auks were believed to be one of the earliest distinct charadriiform lineages due to their characteristic morphology, but genetic analyses have demonstrated that these peculiarities are the product of strong natural selection, instead; as opposed to, for example, plovers (a much older charadriiform lineage), auks radically changed from a wading shorebird to a diving seabird lifestyle. Thus today, the auks are no longer separated in their own suborder (Alcae), but are considered part of the Lari suborder, which otherwise contains gulls and similar birds. Judging from genetic data, their closest living relatives appear to be the skuas, with these two lineages separating about 30 million years ago (Mya).[6][7][8] Alternatively, auks may have split off far earlier from the rest of the Lari and undergone strong morphological, but slow genetic evolution, which would require a very high evolutionary pressure, coupled with a long lifespan and slow reproduction.
The earliest unequivocal
The family contains 25 extant or recently extinct species that are divided into 11 genera.
Of the genera, only a few species are placed in each. This is probably a product of the rather small geographic range of the family (the most limited of any seabird family), and the periods of glacial advance and retreat that have kept the populations on the move in a narrow band of subarctic ocean.
Today, as in the past, the auks are restricted to cooler northern waters. Their ability to spread further south is restricted as their prey hunting method, pursuit diving, becomes less efficient in warmer waters. The speed at which small fish (which along with krill are the auk's principal prey) can swim doubles as the temperature increases from 5 to 15 °C (41 to 59 °F), with no corresponding increase in speed for the bird. The southernmost auks, in California and Mexico, can survive there because of cold upwellings. The current paucity of auks in the Atlantic (six species), compared to the Pacific (19–20 species) is considered to be because of extinctions to the Atlantic auks; the fossil record shows many more species were in the Atlantic during the Pliocene. Auks also tend to be restricted to continental-shelf waters and breed on few oceanic islands.
Hydotherikornis oregonus (Described by Miller in 1931), the oldest purported alcid from the Eocene of California, is actually a petrel (as reviewed by Chandler in 1990) and is reassigned to the tubenoses (Procellariiformes). A 2003 paper, "The Earliest North American Record of Auk (Aves: Alcidae) From the Late Eocene of Central Georgia", reports a Late Eocene, wing-propelled, diving auk from the Priabonain stage of the Late Eocene. These sediments have been dated through Chandronian NALMA {North American Land Mammal Age}, at an estimate of 34.5 to 35.5 million years on the Eocene time scale for fossil-bearing sediments of the Clinchfield Formation, Gordon, Wilkinson County, Georgia. Furthermore, the sediments containing this unabraded portion of a left humerus (43.7 mm long) are tropical or subtropical as evidenced by a wealth of warm-water shark teeth, palaeophied snake vertebrae, and turtles.
Systematics
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Cladogram of the Alcidae family[9]
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- Basal and incertae sedis
- Miocepphus (fossil: Middle Miocene of CE USA)
- Miocepphus mcclungi Wetmore, 1940
- Miocepphus bohaskai Wijnker and Olson, 2009
- Miocepphus blowi Wijnker and Olson, 2009
- Miocepphus mergulellus Wijnker and Olson, 2009
- Miocepphus (fossil: Middle Miocene of CE USA)
- Subfamily Alcinae
- Tribe Alcini – typical auks and murres
- Uria
- Common murre or common guillemot, Uria aalge
- Thick-billed murre or, Brünnich's guillemot, Uria lomvia
- Alle
- Little auk or dovekie, Alle alle
- Pinguinus
- Alca
- Razorbill, Alca torda
- Uria
- Tribe Synthliboramphini – synthliboramphine murrelets
- Synthliboramphus
- Scripps's murrelet, Synthliboramphus scrippsi – formerly in S. hypoleucus ("Xantus's murrelet")
- Guadalupe murrelet, Synthliboramphus hypoleucus – sometimes separated in Endomychura
- Craveri's murrelet, Synthliboramphus craveri – sometimes separated in Endomychura
- Ancient murrelet, Synthliboramphus antiquus
- Japanese murrelet, Synthliboramphus wumizusume
- Synthliboramphus
- Tribe Cepphini – true guillemots
- Cepphus
- Black guillemot or tystie, Cepphus grylle
- Pigeon guillemot, Cepphus columba
- Kurile guillemot, Cepphus columba snowi
- Spectacled guillemot, Cepphus carbo
- Cepphus
- Tribe Brachyramphini – brachyramphine murrelets
- Brachyramphus
- Marbled murrelet, Brachyramphus marmoratus
- Long-billed murrelet, Brachyramphus perdix
- Kittlitz's murrelet, Brachyramphus brevirostris
- Brachyramphus
- Tribe Alcini – typical auks and murres
- Subfamily Fraterculinae
- Tribe Aethiini – auklets
- Ptychoramphus
- Cassin's auklet, Ptychoramphus aleuticus
- Aethia
- Parakeet auklet, Aethia psittacula
- Crested auklet, Aethia cristatella
- Whiskered auklet, Aethia pygmaea
- Least auklet, Aethia pusilla
- Tribe Fraterculini – puffins
- Cerorhinca
- Rhinoceros auklet, Cerorhinca monocerata
- Fratercula
- Atlantic puffin, Fratercula arctica
- Horned puffin, Fratercula corniculata
- Tufted puffin, Fratercula cirrhata
- Cerorhinca
- Tribe Aethiini – auklets
Biodiversity of auks seems to have been markedly higher during the Pliocene.[10] See the genus accounts for prehistoric species.
See also
- Kiviak, a traditional Inuit food from Greenland that is made of auks preserved in seal skin
- Tradeoffs for locomotion in air and water
References
- ^ a b Myers, P.; Espinosa, R.; Parr, C. S.; Jones, T.; Hammond, G. S.; Dewey, T. A. (2022). "Alcidae". Animal Diversity Web. University of Michigan Museum of Zoology. Retrieved 31 December 2022.
- ^ Rasmussen, Pamela, eds. (August 2022). "Noddies, gulls, terns, skimmers, skuas, auks". IOC World Bird List Version 12.2. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 10 November 2022.
- ^ "Definition of Auk". Merriam-Webster.
- ^ "Definition of auk". Dictionary.com.
- ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
- ^ PMID 8587501.
- ^ PMID 12200471.
- ^ PMID 21594108.
- ^ S2CID 36133751.
- S2CID 83934750.
- ^ JSTOR 4086647.
Further reading
- Collinson, Martin (2006). "Splitting headaches? Recent taxonomic changes affecting the British and Western Palaearctic lists". British Birds. 99 (6): 306–323.
- Gaston, Anthony J.; Jones, Ian L. (1998). The Auks : Alcidae. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-854032-9.
- Paton, T.A.; Baker, A.J.; Groth, J.G.; Barrowclough, G.F. (2003). "RAG-1 sequences resolve phylogenetic relationships within charadriiform birds". PMID 13678682.
- Diving Birds of North America by Paul Johnsgard
External links
- Media related to Alcidae at Wikimedia Commons
- Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. III (9th ed.). 1878. p. 85. .