Nick et al.:

While wing molt may not be the cause of the McIntosh PALO not diving, there are 
any number of other possibilities, such as illness.  However, it might behoove 
us to know what it's eating, if anything.  If nothing, that could provide more 
suggestion in the vein of illness or other infirmity.  However, loons eat 
things other than fish, though usually considered obligate piscivores.  From 
the Common Loon BNA account (I couldn't get to the PALO account) -- 
bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/:

"Crustaceans—e.g., crayfish (Decapoda) constitute major part of diet when fish 
are scarce or water is murky (1.0 m visibility), up to about a third of diet 
for males and more for females (Barr 1973). On some Wisconsin lakes, observed 
adults and chicks regularly observed foraging on snails (W. Piper, pers. com.). 
Leeches (Hirudinea) are occasionally an important food, and individuals that 
are stressed or ill sometimes eat vegetation (Barr 1973)."

Having no chance to go see the loon in question, others will have to provide 
the data on the bird's foraging, or lack thereof.

Tony Leukering
Villas, NJ




-----Original Message-----
From: Nick Komar <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]; [email protected]
Sent: Thu, Aug 26, 2010 11:47 pm
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Loon molt 




Many thanks to Tony Leukering for setting the record straight on underwater 
wing-powered locomotion (or rather, lack thereof) among loons, and also for 
sharing his vast wealth of ornithological knowledge with our Colorado birding 
community, making us all wealthier (in knowledge, anyway). I should have done 
some basic research before sticking my foot in my mouth in a public forum like 
Cobirds. I have now done the appropriate homework to learn more about 
underwater locomotion among diving birds. A number of bird taxa including 
alcids, diving petrels, some shearwaters, and our Rocky Mountain dippers use 
their wings to power underwater diving as well as aerial flight, but not loons. 
Interestingly, I learned that some of these species undergo very heavy wing 
molt and yet still dive during these periods of wing molt. So, it begs the 
question (maybe Tony can answer this as well), why is the Boulder Pacific Loon 
not diving as would be typical foraging behavior for this species.
 
Thanks again, Tony!
 
Nick Komar
Fort Collins CO

 

 



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