White-tailed Tropicbird

Phaethon lepturusOrder: PELECANIFORMESFamily: Tropicbirds (Phaethontidae)
White-tailed Tropicbird portrait_2
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Range Map for White-tailed Tropicbird

Overview

White-tailed Tropicbird: A large bird, white with long black bar on upperwing coverts, outer primaries. Black loral mask which extends through and past eye. Bill is yellow to orange. Tail streamers are white and can be up to seventeen inches long. Legs and feet are yellowish, black webbing on toes.

Range and Habitat

White-tailed Tropicbird: Occurs regularly off the coast of the southeastern United States and less commonly throughout the northern and eastern Gulf of Mexico and tropical eastern Atlantic and Indian Oceans. It originates from breeding colonies in Bermuda, the Bahamas, and the Greater and Lesser Antilles. There are three records of this bird in western North America (southern California and Arizona). Nest sites range from closed-canopy rain forest to barren ground.

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Listen:

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Voice Text

"keek-keck", "eeh-oh", "squawk"

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Related Birds:

Red-throated Loon
Red-tailed Tropicbird
Red-billed Tropicbird
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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
Species Phaethon lepturus
Length28 - 32 Inches
Wingspan36.5 Inches

White-tailed Tropicbird

White-tailed Tropicbird: A large bird, white with long black bar on upperwing coverts, outer primaries. Black loral mask which extends through and past eye. Bill is yellow to orange. Tail streamers are white and can be up to seventeen inches long. Legs and feet are yellowish, black webbing on toes.

● Song: "keek-keck", "eeh-oh", "squawk"

● Foraging & Feeding: White-tailed Tropicbird: This bird is pelagic and only comes ashore to breed. It eats small, surface-dwelling pelagic fish and squid by making deep vertical plunge dives into water from air for prey, catching it in its bill, and then swallowing it under water or on surface. It does not follow boats but may express interest in them as flying fish are frequently flushed into flight by moving boats therefore providing easy prey.

● Breeding & nesting: White-tailed Tropicbird: A single white to pale buff egg with brown and purple spots is laid on the ground in ridges of cliffs, crevices, caves, or sheltered by grasses or bush. Incubation ranges from 40 to 42 days and is carried out by both sexes. Both parents care for and feed young.

● Similar species: White-tailed Tropicbird: Adult Red-billed Tropicbird is larger with a slower wingbeat and lacks black patches on upperwing. Immature Red-billed has less distinct barring on the back. Adult Red-tailed Tropicbird also lacks the black patches on the upperwing.

Flight Pattern

Buoyant graceful pigeonlike flight with fluttering wing strokes alternated with soaring glides., Hovers briefly over prey or perch before dipping down to it.
White-tailed Tropicbird Body illustration_2
● Range & Habitat: White-tailed Tropicbird: Occurs regularly off the coast of the southeastern United States and less commonly throughout the northern and eastern Gulf of Mexico and tropical eastern Atlantic and Indian Oceans. It originates from breeding colonies in Bermuda, the Bahamas, and the Greater and Lesser Antilles. There are three records of this bird in western North America (southern California and Arizona). Nest sites range from closed-canopy rain forest to barren ground.
BreedingMonogamous
Population
MigrationMigratory
Weight15.3 Ounces