Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo

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Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo
A Yellow-Tailed Black Cockatoo in Swifts Creek, Australia
A Yellow-Tailed Black Cockatoo in Swifts Creek, Australia
Conservation status
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Psittaciformes
Family: Cacatuidae
Subfamily: Calyptorhynchinae
Genus: Calyptorhynchus
Subgenus: Zanda
Species: C. funereus
Binomial name
Calyptorhynchus funereus
Shaw, 1794
Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo range (in red)
Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo range (in red)
Subspecies

C. (Z.) f. funereus
C. (Z.) f. whiteae
C. (Z.) f. xanthanotus

The Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo, Calyptorhynchus funereus, is native to the south-east of Australia and is the largest of the cockatoos and of Australian parrots. It is found from Eyre Peninsula to south and central eastern Queensland. In some places at least, they appear to have adapted to humans and can be often seen in many parts of urban Sydney and Melbourne.

Although not particularly common, they are one of the most well-loved and characteristic birds of southern Australia. They are usually seen flying at only moderate height. They have particularly large wings and flap deeply, very slowly, and with a peculiar heavy, fluid motion. Their loud, eerie wailing calls carry for long distances, and the combination of sound and silhouette is unmistakable.

Contents

[edit] Taxonomy and naming

The Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo was first described by the English naturalist George Shaw. The current genus name, Calyptorhynchus, comes from the Greek calypto-/καλυπτο- "hidden" and rhynchus/ρυγχος "beak".[1] The change was first made by Anselme Gaëtan Desmarest in 1826.[2]

[edit] Description

Adult birds are between 55 and 65 cm in length and weigh over 800 grams, black overall with paler feather-margins and patches of pale yellow in the tail. The male bird (illustrated at right) has a black bill, a dull yellow patch behind the eye, and a reddish eye-ring. Females and immatures have a grey eye-ring, a light-coloured bill, and a brighter, more clearly-defined yellow cheek-patch.

[edit] Behaviour

[edit] Diet

A Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo striping away bark from a tree
A Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo striping away bark from a tree

Their natural food is varied, but much of the diet comprises seeds of native trees, particularly she-oak (Casuarina) but also Eucalyptus, Acacia, Banksia and Hakea. They are also partial to pine cones in plantations of the introduced Pinus radiata. They are very fond of the larvae of tree-boring beetles and moths, and strip the bark from the trees and tear away at the wood to find them.

[edit] Breeding

The yellow-tailed black cockatoos have a long breeding season. Both sexes construct the nest, which is a large tree hollow, lined with wood chips. The female alone incubates one or two eggs, while the male supplies the food. Usually only one chick survives, and it stays in the care of its parents for about six months.

[edit] References

  1. ^ Liddell, Henry George (1980). Greek-English Lexicon, Abridged Edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-910207-4. 
  2. ^ Desmarest, Anselme Gaëtan (1826). "Perroquet". Dictionnaire des Sciences Naturelles dans lequel on traite méthodiquement des différens êtres de la nature, considérés soit en eux-mêmes, d'après l'état actuel de nos connoissances, soit relativement à l'utilité qu'en peuvent retirer la médecine, l'agriculture, le commerce et les arts. Suivi d'une biographie des plus célèbres naturalistes. Par plusieurs Professeurs du Jardin du Roi, et des principales Écoles de Paris. Strasbourg: F.G. Levrault. pp. 21,117. OCLC 4345179. 
  • Flegg, Jim. Birds of Australia: Photographic Field Guide Sydney: Reed New Holland, 2002. (ISBN 1-876334-78-9)
  • Crome, F. and Shields, J. Parrots & Pigeons of Australia 1992 Angus and Robertson and the National Photographic Index of Australian Wildlife, Sydney.

[edit] External links

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