Eared Grebe

Podiceps nigricollis Brehm

 

 

 

Field Guide IDs:
NG-24; G-20; PE-34; PW-pl 1; AE-pl 183; AW-pl 180; AM(I)-44


Nest
Location
Nest
Type
Eggs &
Mating System
Dev. &
Parental Care
Primary &
2ndary Diet
..
Foraging
Strategy
MF
I: 20-22 DAYS
PRECOCIAL 4

MF
3-5
(1-6)
MONOG
F: 21 DAYS
MF
FISH


BREEDING:

Marshes, ponds, lakes. Usu 1 brood, occ 2.

DISPLAYS:

Courtship and pair-bond maintenance: "penguin dance" with partners facing; stereotyped preening; "cat" attitude (elbows and crest raised) by one bird when partner approaches submerged.

NEST:

Floating platform in shallow water; of fresh and decayed veg, anchored in emergent veg. Build more than 1 nest.

EGGS:

Bluish-white, chalky, nest-stained buff or brown. 1.7" (43 mm).

DIET:

Mostly aquatic insects and larvae, also fish, crustaceans, mollusks, amphibians, feathers.

CONSERVATION:

Winters s to Guatemala. Milliners used feathers for hats, capes, and muffs. Eggs once taken for food.

NOTES:

Dense colonies in shallow water. Young hatch asynchronously; dive and hide, remaining submerged with bill exposed. Chicks ride and are fed on adults' backs. Young of several broods join to form creches. Mono Lake, CA and Great Salt Lake, UT serve as staging areas for fall migration; brine shrimp then comprise >90% of diet. Known in Europe as Black-necked Grebe.

STANFORD. NOTES:

ESSAYS:

Eating Feathers; Visual Displays; Transporting Young; Plume Trade; Creches; Swimming; Eye Color; Precocial and Altricial Young.

REFERENCES:

Cramp and Simmons, 1977; Godfrey, 1986; Winkler and Cooper, 1986.

Except for Stanford Notes, the material in this species treatment is taken, with permission, from The Birder's Handbook (Paul Ehrlich, David Dobkin, & Darryl Wheye, Simon & Schuster, NY. 1988).