Eared Grebe
| Podiceps nigricollis |
Order PODICIPEDIFORMES - Family PODICIPEDIDAE |
Eared Grebe, winter, San Diego, CA; January.
About the photographs
Eared Grebe, adult, non-breeding plumage
Menu
- Description
- Sound
- Conservation Status
- Other Names
- Cool Facts
- Full detailed species account
The most abundant grebe in the world, the Eared Grebe breeds in shallow wetlands in western North America. It occurs in greatest numbers on Mono Lake and the Great Salt Lake in fall, where it doubles its weight in preparation for a nonstop flight to its wintering grounds in the southwestern United States and Mexico.
Description
- Small waterbird.
- Thin, dark bill, often appearing tilted slightly upward.
- Red eyes.
- In summer, black with golden ear tufts.
- In winter, black, white, and gray, with white ear
patch.
- Size: 30-35 cm (12-14 in)
- Wingspan: 52-55 cm (20-22 in)
- Weight: 200-735 g (7.06-25.95 ounces)
Sex Differences
Sexes look alike.
Sound
Various trills and whirrs accompany courtship displays. Alarm call is a single sharp chirp.
»listen to songs of this species
Conservation Status
Abundant. May be increasing in some areas, but frequent mass deaths at the Salton Sea in California, a major staging and wintering area for the species, pose concern.
Other Names
Grèbe à cou noir (French)
Zambullidor orejudo (Spanish)
Black-necked Grebe (British English) (English)
Cool Facts
- At its fall staging areas, the Eared Grebe
more than doubles its weight. The pectoral (chest) muscles shrink to the
point of flightlessness, the digestive organs grow significantly, and
great fat deposits accumulate. Then before departure for migration, the digestive
organs shrink back to about one-fourth their peak size and the heart and
pectoral muscles grow quickly.
- A cycle similar to that of the fall staging areas
occurs three to six times each year for the Eared Grebe. For perhaps nine to
ten months each year the species is flightless; this is the longest flightless
period of any bird in the world capable of flight at all.
- The Eared Grebe migrates only at night. Because of the
length of its fall staging, its southward fall migration is the latest of any
bird species in North America.
- On cold, sunny mornings, the Eared Grebe, like some
other grebe species, sunbathes by facing away from the sun and raising its
rump, exposing dark underlying skin to light. This behavior may make the bird
appear to have a distinctive "high-stern" profile.
Sources used to construct this page:
Cullen, S. A., J. R. Jehl, Jr, and G. L. Nuechterlein. 1999. Eared Grebe (Podiceps nigricollis). In The Birds of North America, No. 433 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Birds of North America, Inc., Philadelphia, PA.