Red-billed Tropicbird

Phaethon aethereusOrder: PELECANIFORMESFamily: Tropicbirds (Phaethontidae)

Breeding Location:

Coastal, sea



Breeding Type:

Monogamous, Thought to pair for life, Colonial or solitary nester



Breeding Population:

Rare in North America



Egg Color:

Red brown or white buff with blotches or spots



Number of Eggs:

1



Incubation Days:

44



Egg Incubator:

Both sexes



Nest Material:



Migration:

Migratory



Splitbar

Overview

Red-billed Tropicbird: Slender, white, gull-like seabird with long white tail streamers. White back, finely barred black. Black eye stripe curves upward behind eye, almost meets at nape. Black primaries, red bill. Direct, rapid flight, pigeonlike, stiff, shallow wingbeats. The largest tropicbird.

Range and Habitat

Red-billed Tropicbird: Found in warm open ocean waters, often far from shore. Breeds on remote coastal islands or occasionally coastal mainland of Pacific Mexico and Caribbean. Occasional visitor off the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Florida and California. Rare to Gulf Coast, one record for Arizona.

Breeding and Nesting

Red-billed Tropicbird: Monogamous semi-colonial nester. Scrape nest built by both male and female in a cave or burrow, sometimes on ground, always close to shore. Female lays one blotched or spotted red brown or white buff egg. Both sexes incubate for approximately 44 days and tend young until fledging. Young may stay in nest for up to 12 weeks.

Foraging and Feeding

Red-billed Tropicbird: Flies high above water with direct, fast, and shallow wingbeats. Dives into water to catch fish and squid.

Readily Eats

Vocalization

Red-billed Tropicbird: Shrill and grating tern-like rattles often repeated in breeding colonies. Usually silent at sea.

Similar Species

Red-billed Tropicbird: Red-tailed tropicbird is smaller, with more white overall, and red tail streamers. Lacks fine black barring on back. White-tailed Tropicbird is smaller with all white back, black "V"-shaped pattern extending from rump to wings, and with much less black in the primaries. Eye stripe is reduced and is downward curving behind the eye.

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Bird Call Credits: The Macaulay Library of Natural Sounds at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Martyn Stewart, Redmond, Washington USA. The reuse or copying of bird calls in this database is strictly forbidden.

Family Tropicbird (Phaethontidae)_blue
Species Phaethon aethereus
Length18 - 40 Inches
Wingspan44 Inches

Red-billed Tropicbird

Red-billed Tropicbird: Slender, white, gull-like seabird with long white tail streamers. White back, finely barred black. Black eye stripe curves upward behind eye, almost meets at nape. Black primaries, red bill. Direct, rapid flight, pigeonlike, stiff, shallow wingbeats. The largest tropicbird.

● Song: "krreea", "krri-krri-krri-krri-krri-krri"

● Foraging & Feeding: Red-billed Tropicbird: Flies high above water with direct, fast, and shallow wingbeats. Dives into water to catch fish and squid.

● Breeding & nesting: Red-billed Tropicbird: Monogamous semi-colonial nester. Scrape nest built by both male and female in a cave or burrow, sometimes on ground, always close to shore. Female lays one blotched or spotted red brown or white buff egg. Both sexes incubate for approximately 44 days and tend young until fledging. Young may stay in nest for up to 12 weeks.

● Similar species: Red-billed Tropicbird: Red-tailed tropicbird is smaller, with more white overall, and red tail streamers. Lacks fine black barring on back. White-tailed Tropicbird is smaller with all white back, black "V"-shaped pattern extending from rump to wings, and with much less black in the primaries. Eye stripe is reduced and is downward curving behind the eye.

Flight Pattern

Direct flight with strong steady shallow wing beats.
Red-billed Tropicbird Body Illustration
● Range & Habitat: Red-billed Tropicbird: Found in warm open ocean waters, often far from shore. Breeds on remote coastal islands or occasionally coastal mainland of Pacific Mexico and Caribbean. Occasional visitor off the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of Florida and California. Rare to Gulf Coast, one record for Arizona.
BreedingMonogamous, Thought to pair for life, Colonial or solitary nester
PopulationRare in North America
MigrationMigratory
Weight27.2 Ounces