Common Moorhen

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Common Moorhen
Eurasian Common Moorhen(Gallinula chloropus chloropus)
Eurasian Common Moorhen
(Gallinula chloropus chloropus)
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Gruiformes
Family: Rallidae
Genus: Gallinula
Species: G. chloropus
Binomial name
Gallinula chloropus
(Linnaeus, 1758)
European distribution of the Common Moorhen.Green: Year-roundYellow: Summer.
European distribution of the Common Moorhen.
Green: Year-round
Yellow: Summer.
Subspecies

About 12, see text

Synonyms

Gallinula galeata

The Common Moorhen (Gallinula chloropus) is a bird in the rail family with an almost worldwide distribution outside Australasia as well as deserts, many tropical rainforests, and the polar regions. It is equally often called the common Waterhen, a name which is more apt because the bird lives around ponds, lakes, canals, marshes, etc., but is not common in moorland. Other names include[1] the water rail, the moor coot and the common gallinule. This proliferation of names is probably due to the commonness of the bird in many different places.

Contents


G. c. chloropus feeding juveniles in  Kolkata, West Bengal, India.
G. c. chloropus feeding juveniles in Kolkata, West Bengal, India.
G. c. chloropus-  Immature in  Kolkata
G. c. chloropus- Immature in Kolkata

This is a common breeding bird in marsh environments and well-vegetated lakes. It is often secretive, but can become tame in some areas. Populations in areas where the waters freeze, such as southern Canada, the northern USA and eastern Europe, will migrate to more temperate climes.

It is a distinctive species, with dark plumage apart from the white undertail, yellow legs and a red facial shield. The young are browner and lack the red shield. It has a wide range of gargling calls and will emit loud hisses when threatened.

This species will consume a wide variety of vegetable material and small aquatic creatures. They forage while swimming, sometimes upending to feed, or walking through the marsh.

The nest is a roofed basket built on the ground in dense vegetation. Laying starts in spring, between mid-March and mid-May in N hemisphere temperate regions. 8-12 eggs are usually laid per female early in the season; a second brood in summer usually has only 5-8 or even less eggs; nests may be shared by females. Incubation lasts about three weeks. Both parents incubate and feed the young. These fledge after 40-50 days, become independent usually a few weeks thereafter, and may raise their first brood the next spring.(Snow et al. 1998)

Despite loss of habitat in parts of its range, the Common Moorhen remains plentiful and widespread.

[edit] Subspecies

Common Gallinule or Florida Gallinule, St. Petersburg, Florida. Note more angular red frontal shield.
Common Gallinule or Florida Gallinule, St. Petersburg, Florida. Note more angular red frontal shield.

About one dozen subspecies are today considered valid; several more have been described which are now considered junior synonyms. Most are not very readily recognizable as differences are rather subtle and often clinal. Usually, the location of a sighting is the most reliable indication as to subspecies identification, but the migratory tendencies of this species make identifications based on location not completely reliable. Old World birds have a frontal shield with rounded top and fairly parallel sides; the tailward margin of the red unfeathered area is a smooth waving line. American birds have a frontal shield that has a fairly straight top and is less wide towards the bill, giving a marked indentation to the back margin of the red area.

Despite being a bountiful species, small populations are of course more prone to extinction. The Mariana Common Moorhen or pulattat (G. c. guami) is very rare nowadays due to destruction of habitat. Only some 300 adult birds remained in 2001, and it is listed as Endangered both federally (since 1984) and locally (Takano & Haig 2004).

In addition to the extant subspecies listed below, there are two Pleistocene paleosubspecies known from fossils. These were distinct (generally larger) forms and probably the direct ancestors of some of today's Common Moorhens: Gallinula chloropus brodkorbi from the Ichetucknee River, Florida, and an undescribed Early Pleistocene form from Dursunlu, Turkey (Louchart et al. 1998).

[edit] Eurasian Common Moorhen

G. c. chloropus (Linnaeus, 1758)

Ranges from Northwest Europe to North Africa and eastwards to Central Siberia and from the humid regions of southern Asia to Japan and Central Malaysia; also found in Sri Lanka and the Canary, Azores, Madeira, and Cape Verde islands. Includes the proposed subspecies correiana and indica.

[edit] Southern American Common Moorhen

G. c. galeata (Lichtenstein, 1818)

Found in Trinidad, the Guyanas, and from Brazil south of the Amazonas to North Argentina and Uruguay. Wings and back are fairly uniform dark brownish slate grey.

[edit] Indo-Pacific Common Moorhen

G. c. orientalis (Horsfield, 1821)

Found in the Seychelles, Andaman Islands, and South Malaysia through Indonesia; also found in the Philippines and Palau. Small, with slate grey upperwing coverts and large frontal shield.

[edit] African Common Moorhen

G. c. meridionalis (C. L. Brehm, 1831)

Found in Sub-Saharan Africa and Saint Helena. Appearance is similar to orientalis, but the frontal shield is smaller.

[edit] Madagascan Common Moorhen

G. c. pyrrhorrhoa (A. Newton, 1861)

Found on the islands of Madagascar, Réunion, Mauritius, and the Comoros. The undertail coverts are buff.

[edit] Andean Common Moorhen

G. c. garmani (Allen, 1876)

Found in the Andes from Peru to Northwest Argentina. Appearance is similar to galeata, but larger.

[edit] Hawaiian Moorhen

G. c. sandvicensis (Streets, 1877)

Subspecies is endemic to the Hawaiian Islands. Has a large frontal shield; the tarsus is reddish-orange in front. Known as ‘alae ‘ula in Hawaiian.

[edit] Antillean Common Moorhen

G. c. cerceris (Bangs, 1910)

Found in the Antilles, except Trinidad and Barbados; also found in South Florida. Has a long bill and large feet and is less brown above. Known as Florida Gallinule in the USA. [2]

[edit] North American Common Moorhen

G. c. cachinnans (Bangs, 1915)

Ranges from Southeast Canada south through the USA, excluding the Great Plains region, to West Panama; also found in the Galápagos and Bermuda. Appearance is similar to cerceris, but upperparts coloration more like chloropus. Also known as Common Gallinule and Marsh Hen.

[edit] Subandean Common Moorhen

G. c. pauxilla (Bangs, 1915)

Found in lowland areas of East Panama south to Northwest Peru. Appearance is similar to cerceris, but smaller.

[edit] Mariana Common Moorhen

G. c. guami (Hartert, 1917)

Subspecies is endemic to the Northern Mariana Islands. Body plumage is very dark. Known as pulattat in Chamorro.

[edit] Barbados Moorhen

G. c. barbadensis (Bond, 1954)

Subspecies is endemic to Barbados. Appearance is similar to cerceris, but with lighter head and neck, and less dull grey overall.

[edit] Gallery

[edit] References

  • BirdLife International (2004). Gallinula chloropus. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2006. Retrieved on 11 May 2006. Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern
  • Louchart, Antoine; Mourer-Chauviré, Cécile; Guleç, Erksin; Howell, Francis Clark & White, Tim D. (1998): L'avifaune de Dursunlu, Turquie, Pléistocène inférieur: climat, environnement et biogéographie. C. R. Acad. Sci. Paris IIA 327(5): 341-346. [French with English abridged version] doi:10.1016/S1251-8050(98)80053-0 (HTML abstract)
  • Snow, David W.; Perrins, Christopher M.; Doherty, Paul & Cramp, Stanley (1998): The complete birds of the western Palaearctic on CD-ROM. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0192685791
  • Takano, Leilani L. & Haig, Susan M. (2004): Distribution and Abundance of the Mariana Subspecies of the Common Moorhen. Waterbirds 27(2): 245-250. DOI:10.1675/1524-4695(2004)027[0245:DAAOTM]2.0.CO;2 HTML abstract

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ [1]See Webster's Unabridged Dictionary
  2. ^ Due to uncertainty about the Floridan birds' identity, this vernacular name was also applied to ssp. galeata and cachinnans.

[edit] External links

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