Arctic Tern
โ Fly silly sea bird, no dreams can possess you, no voices can blame you for sun on your wings. โ
โ Joni Mitchell
Scientific Taxonomy & Character Information
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Charadriiformes
Family: Laridae
Genus: Sterna
Species: Sterna paradisaea
Descendant: Sterna
Named by: Erik Ludvigsen Pontoppidan
Year Published: 1763
Size: 33โ36 cm (13โ14 in) long in length; 76โ85 cm (30โ33 in) wingspan in length; 33 cm tall in height; 86โ127 g (3.0โ4.5 oz) in weight
Lifespan: 30+ years
Type:ย
Reptiles (Archosaurs)
Birds (Larids)
Title:ย
Longest Migration
Pantheon: Terran/Gaian ๐บ๐ณ๐
Time Period: Holocene
Alignment: Shy
Threat Level: โ โ
Diet: Carnivorous ๐ฅฉ๐๐ง
Elements: Water ๐, air ๐ฌ๏ธ, ice โ๏ธ
Inflicts: Waterblight ๐, airblight ๐ฌ๏ธ, iceblight โ๏ธ, stunned ๐ต, vomitblight ๐คฎ
Weaknesses: Fire ๐ฅ, electric โก, ice โ๏ธ, metal ๐ฉ
Casualties: n/a
Based On: itself
Conservation Status: Least Concern (LC) โ IUCN Red Listย
The Arctic Tern (Sterna paradisaea) is a tern in the family Laridae. This bird has a circumpolar breeding distribution covering the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions of Europe, Asia, and North America.
Physical Appearance
Like most terns, the Arctic tern has high aspect ratio wings and a tail with a deep fork. Juveniles differ from adults in their black bill and legs, "scaly" appearing wings, and mantle with dark feather tips, dark carpal wing bar, and short tail streamers. During their first summer, juveniles also have a whiter forecrown.
The adult plumage is grey above, with a black nape and crown and white cheeks. The upperwings are pale grey, with the area near the wingtip being translucent. The tail is white, and the underparts pale grey. Both sexes are similar in appearance. The winter plumage is similar, but the crown is whiter and the bills are darker.
While the Arctic tern is similar to the common and roseate terns, its colouring, profile, and call are slightly different. Compared to the common tern, it has a longer tail and mono-coloured bill, while the main differences from the roseate are its slightly darker colour and longer wings. The Arctic tern's call is more nasal and rasping than that of the common, and is easily distinguishable from that of the roseate.
The Arctic tern resembles the common and roseate terns, but it differs slightly in terms of color, profile, and call. Its main distinction from the roseate tern are its slightly darker color and longer wings, while it varies from the common tern in that it has a longer tail and a monochromatic bill. The call of the Arctic tern is more nasal and raspy than the common tern, and it can be easily distinguished from the roseate tern.
Abilities
The species is strongly migratory, seeing two summers each year as it migrates along a convoluted route from its northern breeding grounds to the Antarctic coast for the southern summer and back again about six months later.
Ecology
Arctic terns are long-lived birds, with many reaching fifteen to thirty years of age. They eat mainly fish and small marine invertebrates. The Arctic tern's meal varies depending on the season and location, but it is typically carnivorous. It typically consumes small fish or sea creatures. Fish species make up the majority of the diet and are responsible for more biomass consumption than any other type of food. Young (1-2 years old) shoaling organisms like herring, cod, sandlances, and capelin are the prey species. Amphipods, crabs, and krill are only a few of the sea crustaceans eaten. These birds occasionally consume mollusks, marine worms, berries, and insects on their northern breeding grounds.
Around the fourth or third year, breeding starts. Arctic terns typically return to a single colony each year and mate for life. Particularly in birds that are building their first nest, courtship is elaborate. The "high flight" phase of courtship involves the female pursuing the male up to a great height before descending gradually. "Fish flights," in which the male will present fish to the female, come after this display. On the ground, strutting is done while the wings are lowered and the tail is raised. Both birds will typically fly and circle one another after this.
Both sexes concur on a nesting location, and both will protect it. The male keeps on feeding the female during that time. Soon after, there is mating. Breeding occurs in colonies along the coast, on islands, and sporadically inland on tundra close to the water. In mixed flocks with common tern, it occurs frequently. For every clutch, it produces one three eggs, two.
Behavior
One of the most combative terns, it is ferociously protective of its nest & young. It will strike the top as well as the side of the head once assaulting people and dangerous animals. Although it is too small to seriously harm an animal the length of a human, it can still draw blood and deter many raptorial birds, polar bears, and other smaller mammalian predators like foxes and cats.
Distribution and Habitat
This species has a circumpolar range, breeding in the Arctic and subarctic regions of Europe, Asia and North America as far south as Brittany (France) and Massachusetts (U.S.A.). It is a transequatorial migrant, and can be found wintering throughout the Southern Ocean to the edge of the Antarctic ice and the southern tips of South America and Africa. Overall population trends are unknown.
There are no recognized subspecies of the Arctic tern; it has a constant poleward breeding distribution throughout the world. During the northern summer, it can be found in coastal areas of cooler temperate regions of North America and Eurasia. It can be discovered at sea during southern summer, getting as far north as the Antarctic ice.
Movement Pattern: Full Migrant
Individual Type: Gather
Population Trend: Increasing
Population: ???
Locomotion: Versatile
Habitat: Polar; tundra; taiga; montane grasslands and shrublands; temperate coniferous forests; temperate broadleaf and mixed forests; temperate deciduous forests, temperate grasslands, savannas, and shrublands; subtropical coniferous forests; subtropical moist broadleaf forests; subtropical dry broadleaf forests; limestone forest; tropical coniferous forests; tropical moist broadleaf forests; tropical dry broadleaf forests; tropical grasslands; Mediterranean forests, woodlands, and scrub; deserts and xeric shrublands; badlands; flooded grasslands and savannas; swamp; riparian; wetland; mangrove forest; air-breathing coral reefs; graveyard vale; warm river; cold river; lukewarm river; subterranean river; pond; littoral
Earth: see below
Extant (breeding): Belgium; Estonia; Faroe Islands; Greenland; Iceland; Latvia; Lithuania; Netherlands; Norway; Russian Federation (Eastern Asian Russia, Central Asian Russia, European Russia); Spain; Svalbard and Jan Mayen; United Kingdom; United States
Extant (non-breeding): Antarctica
Extant (passage): Austria; Costa Rica
Extant (seasonality uncertain): Mexico
Extant (resident): Angola; Argentina; Australia; Benin; Bermuda; Bolivia, Plurinational States of; Brazil; British Indian Ocean Territory; Cabo Verde; Cameroon; Canada; Chile; Colombia; Congo; Cuba; Cรดte d'Ivoire; Denmark; Ecuador; Equatorial Guinea; Falkland Islands (Malvinas); Finland; France; Gabon; Gambia; Germany; Ghana; Greece; Guinea; Guinea-Bissau; Ireland; Japan; Liberia; Mauritania; Morocco; Namibia; New Zealand; Nigeria; Paraguay; Peru; Poland; Portugal; Puerto Rico; Saint Pierre and Miquelon; Sierra Leone; Somalia; South Africa; South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands; Sweden; Togo
Extant & Vagrant (non-breeding): Panama
Extant & Vagrant (passage): Guadeloupe; Kuwait; Oman; Sudan; United Arab Emirates
Extant & Vagrant (seasonality uncertain): Montenegro; Serbia; Uruguay
Extant & Vagrant: Algeria; Belarus; Bulgaria; Central African Republic; Congo, The Democratic Republic of the; Croatia; Cyprus; Czechia; Egypt; French Southern Territories; Gibraltar; Hungary; India; Indonesia; Israel; Italy; Jordan; Lesotho; Libya; Luxembourg; Marshall Islands; Mozambique; Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha; Senegal; Slovakia; Switzerland; Turkey; Ukraine; Virgin Islands, U.S.
Extant & Origin Uncertain (seasonality uncertain): Bouvet Island; Heard Island and McDonald Islands
Extant & Origin Uncertain: Guatemala
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