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Sandgrouse

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Sandgrouse
Double-banded sandgrouse
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Clade: Columbimorphae
Order: Pterocliformes
Huxley, 1868
Family: Pteroclidae
Bonaparte, 1831
Genera
Synonyms
  • Order level
    • Pteroclidiformes
    • Pterocleiformes
  • Family level
    • Pteroclididae
    • Pterocleidae

Sandgrouse is the common name for Pteroclidae /tɛˈrɒklɪd/, a family of sixteen species of bird, members of the order Pterocliformes /ˌtɛrəklɪfɔːrmz/. They are traditionally placed in two genera. The two central Asian species are classified as Syrrhaptes and the other fourteen species, from Africa and Asia, are placed in the genus Pterocles. They are ground-dwelling birds restricted to treeless, open country, such as plains, savannahs, and semi-deserts. They are distributed across northern, southern, and eastern Africa, Madagascar, the Middle East, and India through central Asia. The ranges of the black-bellied sandgrouse and the pin-tailed sandgrouse even extend into the Iberian Peninsula and France, and Pallas's sandgrouse occasionally breaks out in large numbers from its normal range in Asia.

Description

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Sandgrouse have small, pigeon-like heads and necks and sturdy compact bodies. They range in size from 24 to 40 centimetres (9.4 to 15.7 in) in length and from 150 to 500 grams (5.3 to 17.6 oz) in weight. The adults are sexually dimorphic with the males being slightly larger and more brightly colored than the females. They have eleven strong primary feathers and long pointed wings, giving them a fast and direct flight. The muscles of the wings are powerful and the birds are capable of rapid take off and sustained flight. In some species, the central feathers in the tail are extended into long points.

The legs are short and members of the genus Syrrhaptes have feathers growing on both the legs and toes, and no hind toes, while members of the genus Pterocles have legs feathered just at the front, no feathers on the toes, and rudimentary hind toes raised off the ground.[1]

The plumage is cryptic, generally being in shades of sandy brown, grey and buff, and variously mottled and barred, enabling the birds to merge into the dusty landscape. There is a dense layer of under down which helps insulate the bird from extremes of heat and cold. The feathers of the belly are specially adapted for absorbing water and retaining it, allowing adults, particularly males, to carry water to chicks that may be many miles away from watering holes.[2][3] The amount of water that can be carried in this way is 15 to 20 millilitres (0.5 to 0.7 fluid ounces).[4]

Distribution

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Pallas's sandgrouse in a field in the Gobi Desert

Members of the genus Syrrhaptes are found in the steppes of central Asia. Their range extends from the Caspian Sea through southern Siberia, Tibet, and Mongolia to northern and central China. They are normally resident, but Pallas's sandgrouse can be locally migratory and very occasionally is irruptive, appearing in areas well outside its normal range. This happened in 1863 and 1888, and a major irruption took place in 1908 when many birds were seen as far afield as Ireland and the United Kingdom where they bred in Yorkshire and Moray.[3][4]

Members of the genus Pterocles are mainly found in the drier parts of northern, eastern, and southern Africa, though the range of some species extends into the Middle East and western Asia. The Madagascar sandgrouse is restricted to Madagascar. The black-bellied sandgrouse and the pin-tailed sandgrouse also occur in Spain, Portugal, and southern France. Most species are sedentary though some make local migrations, typically to lower altitudes in winter.[4]

Behaviour and ecology

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Diet and feeding

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Namaqua sandgrouse are gregarious and feed and drink in large flocks

Sandgrouse are principally seed eaters. Other food items eaten include green shoots and leaves, bulbs, and berries. Insect food such as ants and termites may also be eaten, especially during the breeding season.[1] The diet of many sandgrouse is highly specialised, with the seeds of a small number of plant species being dominant. This may depend on local availability but in other cases it reflects actual selection of favoured seeds over others by the sandgrouse. Seeds of leguminous plants are usually an important part of the diet. In agricultural areas oats and other grain are readily taken. Seeds are either collected from the ground or directly from the plants.

Foraging techniques vary between species that coexist, which reduces competition; in Namibia, double-banded sandgrouse feed slowly and methodically whilst Namaqua sandgrouse feed rapidly, exploring loose soil with their beaks and flicking it away sideways.[5] Grit is also swallowed to help grind up food in the gizzard.[1]

Sandgrouse are gregarious, feeding in flocks of up to 100 birds. As a consequence of their dry diet, they need to visit water sources regularly. Drinking times vary among the species. Ten species drink at dawn, four at dusk, and two at indeterminate times.[1] When drinking, water is sucked into the beak, which is then raised to let the water flow down into the crop. By repeating this procedure rapidly, enough water to last twenty four hours can be swallowed in a few seconds.[1] As they travel to water holes, they call to members of their own species and many hundreds or thousands synchronise their arrival at the drinking site despite converging from many different locations scattered over hundreds of square miles (kilometres) of territory.[6]

They are vulnerable to attack while watering but with a large number of birds milling about, predators find it difficult to select a target bird and are likely to have been spotted before they can get close to the flock.[3] The choice of a watering site is influenced by the topography of the nearby ground. The sandgrouse tend to avoid sites with cover for mammalian predators and their greatest risk is usually from predatory birds.[7]

Sandgrouse travel tens of miles to their traditional water holes and tend to disregard temporary water sources which may appear periodically. This clearly has a survival value, because a dried up water source in an arid region could result in dehydration and death.[3] The Burchell's sandgrouse in the Kalahari Desert sometimes travels over 100 miles (160 km) daily to reach a water source.[4] Not all species need to drink every day, and the Tibetan sandgrouse does not need to travel to drink, because of the abundance of water from melting snowfields in its habitat.[3]

Breeding

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Painted sandgrouse chick

Sandgrouse are monogamous. The breeding season usually coincides with a crop of seeds after the local rainy season and at this time the feeding flocks tend to break up into pairs. The nesting site is a slight depression in the ground, sometimes lined with a few pieces of dry foliage. Most typically, three cryptic eggs are laid, though occasionally there may be two or four. The intricately patterned, precocial downy young, and egg colouration (though not shape) closely resemble those of many Charadriiformes. Eggs are near elliptical.[8] Incubation duties are shared; in most species, the males incubate at night while the females sit on the eggs during the day. The eggs usually hatch after 20–25 days.

The precocial chicks are covered with down and leave the nest as soon as the last hatchling has dried out. The parents do not provide them with food and they learn, with parental guidance, what is edible and what is not. The chicks obtain their water from the soaked downy feathers on the adults' breasts. Chicks are too small and young to thermoregulate at first, and their parents shade them during the hottest part of the day, and brood them to keep warm at night. The chicks remain with their parents, as a family group, for several months.[2]

Taxonomy

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The Pteroclidae was formerly included in the Galliformes due to the similarities the family shares with the true grouse. However, it was later discovered that these similarities are superficial and a result of convergent evolution.[9] Sandgrouse were later placed near the Columbiformes largely due to their reported ability to drink by the "sucking" or "pumping" action of peristalsis of the esophagus, an unusual characteristic.[10] More recently, it has been reported that they cannot suck up water in this way,[11] and they are now treated separately in the order Pterocliformes. They have been considered near passerine birds, and are thought by some to be closer to the shorebirds (Charadriiformes).[12]

In the DNA-study by Fain and Houde (2004)[13] they were included in the Metaves, together with the Columbiformes. In the larger study by Hackett et al. (2008)[8] they were once again positioned close to the Columbiformes, in Columbimorphae, but also with the Mesites.

Phylogeny

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Living Pterocliformes, based on the work by John Boyd.[14]

Pteroclidae
Pterocles

Pterocles alchata (Linnaeus 1766) (pin-tailed sandgrouse)

Nyctiperdix

N. decoratus (Gabanis 1868) (bridled/black-faced sandgrouse)

Species

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Sandgrouse
Common and binomial names[15] Image Description, range and status Egg
Pin-tailed sandgrouse
Pterocles alchata
(Linnaeus, 1766)
Pin-tailed sandgrouse
Length 31 to 39 centimetres (12 to 15 in)
There are two subspecies:[16]
P. a. alchata – Spain, Portugal, France, north west Africa
P. a. caudacutus – Middle East, Turkey and eastward to Kazakhstan

Status: Least concern
Egg
Double-banded sandgrouse
Pterocles bicinctus
Temminck, 1815
Double-banded sandgrouse
Length 31 to 39 centimetres (12 to 15 in)
There are three subspecies:[17]
P. b. ansorgei – south west Angola
P. b. bicinctus – Namibia, Botswana, north west Cape Province
P. b. multicolor – Zambia, Malawi, Mozambique and Transvaal

Status: Least concern
Burchell's sandgrouse
Pterocles burchelli
Sclater, 1922
Burchell's sandgrouse
Length 25 cm (10 in)
Monotypic[18]
Angola, Namibia, Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe, South Africa

Status: Least concern
Crowned sandgrouse
Pterocles coronatus
Lichtenstein, 1823
Crowned sandgrouse
There are five subspecies:[19]
P. c. atratus – Saudi Arabia, Iran, Afghanistan
P. c. coronatus – Sahara, Morocco to Red Sea
P. c. ladas – Pakistan
P. c. saturatus – Oman
P. c. vastitas – Sinai, Israel, Jordan
Status: Least concern
Black-faced sandgrouse
Pterocles decoratus
Cabanis, 1868
Black-faced sandgrouse
There are three subspecies:[20]
P. d. decoratus – south east Kenya and east Tanzania
P. d. ellenbecki – north east Uganda, north Kenya, Ethiopia, Somalia
P. d. loveridgei – west Kenya, west Tanzania

Status: Least concern
Chestnut-bellied sandgrouse
Pterocles exustus
Temminck, 1825
(Pictured on left)
Chestnut-bellied sandgrouse
There are six subspecies:[21]
P. e. ellioti – Sudan, Eritrea, north Ethiopia, Somalia
P. e. erlangeri – Saudi Arabia, Gulf States, Yemen
P. e. exustus – Mauritania to Sudan
P. e. floweri – Egypt (almost certainly extinct)
P. e. hindustan – south east Iran, Pakistan, India
P. e. olivascens – south Ethiopia, Kenya, north Tanzania
Status: Least concern
Yellow-throated sandgrouse
Pterocles gutturalis
Smith, 1836
Yellow-throated sandgrouse
There are two subspecies:[22]
P. g. gutturalis – south Zambia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, South Africa
P. g. saturatior – Ethiopia, Kenya, Tanzania, north Zambia

Status: Least concern
Painted sandgrouse
Pterocles indicus
(Gmelin, 1789)
Painted sandgrouse
Monotypic[23]
India

Status: Least concern
Egg
Lichtenstein's sandgrouse
Pterocles lichtensteinii
Temminck, 1825
Lichtenstein's sandgrouse
There are five subspecies:[24]
P. l. targius – Sahara, Sahel, south Morocco to Chad
P. l. lichtensteinii – Israel, Sinai, Egypt, Sudan, Ethiopia, Somalia
P. l. sukensis – Sudan, Ethiopia, Kenya
P. l. ingramsi – Yemen
P. l. arabicus – Saudi Arabia, Iran, Afghanistan, Pakistan
Status: Least concern
Namaqua sandgrouse
Pterocles namaqua
(Gmelin, 1789)
Namaqua sandgrouse
Length 31 to 39 centimetres (12 to 15 in)
Monotypic[25]
Angola, Namibia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, South Africa

Status: Least concern
Black-bellied sandgrouse
Pterocles orientalis
(Linnaeus, 1758)
Black-bellied sandgrouse
There are two subspecies:[26]
P. o. arenarius – Kazakhstan, Pakistan and western China
P. o. orientalis – Northwest Africa, Canary Islands, Iberian Peninsula,
Cyprus, Middle East, Turkey and Iran

Status: Least concern
Egg
Madagascar sandgrouse
Pterocles personatus
Gould, 1843
Madagascan sandgrouse

Monotypic[27]
Madagascar

Status: Least concern
Four-banded sandgrouse
Pterocles quadricinctus
(Temminck, 1815)
Four-banded sandgrouse
Length 25 to 28 centimetres (9.8 to 11.0 in)
Monotypic[28]
Central Africa

Status: Least concern
Egg
Spotted sandgrouse
Pterocles senegallus
(Linnaeus, 1771)
Spotted sandgrouse
Length 33 centimetres (13 in)
Monotypic[29]
Northern Africa, Middle East and western Asia

Status: Least concern
Egg
Tibetan sandgrouse
Syrrhaptes tibetanus
(Gould, 1850)
Tibetan sandgrouse
Length 30 to 41 centimetres (12 to 16 in)
Monotypic[30]
Mountains of central Asia, Tibet and central China

Status: Least concern
Pallas's sandgrouse
Syrrhaptes paradoxus
(Pallas, 1773)
Pallas's sandgrouse
Length 30 to 41 centimetres (12 to 16 in)
Monotypic[31]
Mountains and steppes of central Asia

Status: Least concern
Egg

Relations with humans

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Sandgrouse have little interaction with people, primarily because most species live in arid unpopulated areas and at low densities. They are not generally sought after as game birds as they are not especially palatable, although they have on occasion been taken in great numbers at water holes. An attempt to introduce them into Nevada failed but they have been introduced to Hawaii.[32] No species is considered to be threatened although there have been some localised range contractions, particularly in Europe.[33] A subspecies of the chestnut-bellied sandgrouse, P. e. floweri, was last seen in the Nile Valley of Egypt in 1979. It is thought to be extinct, but the reasons for this are unknown.[34]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Campbell, Bruce; Lack, Elizabeth (1985). A Dictionary of Birds. Buteo Books. p. 520. ISBN 0-931130-12-3.
  2. ^ a b Crome, France H.J. (1991). Forshaw, Joseph (ed.). Encyclopaedia of Animals: Birds. London: Merehurst Press. pp. 114–115. ISBN 1-85391-186-0.
  3. ^ a b c d e Gooders, John, ed. (1979). Birds of Heath and Woodland: Pteroclidae: Sandgrouse. London: Orbis Publishing Ltd. pp. 2–11. ISBN 0-85613-380-9.
  4. ^ a b c d "Pteroclidae Sandgrouse". Creagrus: Bird Families of the World. Retrieved 2012-05-30.
  5. ^ "Pterocles namaqua (Namaqua sandgrouse)". Biodiversity. Retrieved 2012-06-06.
  6. ^ Ward, P. (1972). "The functional significance of mass drinking flights by sandgrouse (Pteroclididae)". Ibis. 114 (4): 533–536. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919X.1972.tb00854.x.
  7. ^ Ferns, P. N.; Hinsley, S. A. (1995). "Importance of Topography in the Selection of Drinking Sites by Sandgrouse". Functional Ecology. 9 (3): 371–375. doi:10.2307/2389999. JSTOR 2389999.
  8. ^ a b Hackett, Shannon J.; Kimball, Rebecca T.; Reddy, Sushma; et al. (2008). "A phylogenomic study of birds reveals their evolutionary history". Science. 320 (5884): 1763–1768. Bibcode:2008Sci...320.1763H. doi:10.1126/science.1157704. PMID 18583609. S2CID 6472805.
  9. ^ Maclean, G. L. (1967). "Die systematische Stellung der Flughühner(Pteroclididae)". Journal of Ornithology. 108 (2): 203–217. doi:10.1007/BF01671410. S2CID 39713128.
  10. ^ Lorenz, K. (1939). "Verhandl". Deutsch. Zool. Ges. (in German). 41 (Zool. Anz. Suppl. 12): 69–102.
  11. ^ Cade, T. J.; Willoughby, E. J.; Maclean, G. L. (1966). "Drinking behavior of sandgrouse in the Namib and Kalahari deserts, Africa" (PDF). The Auk. 83 (1).
  12. ^ Crome, F.H.J.; Hutchins, M.; Thoney, D.A.; McDade, M.C., eds. (2004). Birds II: Columbiformes (Pigeons, Doves, and Dodos). Vol. 9 (2nd ed.). Detroit, MI: Gale. pp. 241–246.
  13. ^ Fain, Matthew G.; Houde, Peter (2004). "Parallel radiations in the primary clades of birds". Evolution. 58 (11): 2558–2573. doi:10.1554/04-235. PMID 15612298. S2CID 1296408.
  14. ^ Boyd, John (2007). "METAVES I Columbimorphae, Eurypygimorphae" (PDF) (personal website). Retrieved 30 December 2015.
  15. ^ del Hoyo, J.; Elliot, A.; Sargatal, J., eds. (1997). Handbook of the Birds of the World Volume 4: Sandgrouse to Cuckoos. Lynx Editions. ISBN 84-87334-22-9.
  16. ^ "Pin-tailed sandgrouse (Pterocles alchata)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  17. ^ "Double-banded sandgrouse (Pterocles bicinctus)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  18. ^ "Burchell's sandgrouse (Pterocles burchelli)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  19. ^ "Crowned sandgrouse (Pterocles coronatus)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  20. ^ "Black-faced sandgrouse (Pterocles decoratus)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  21. ^ "Chestnut-bellied sandgrouse (Pterocles exustus)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  22. ^ "Yellow-throated sandgrouse (Pterocles gutturalis)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  23. ^ "Painted sandgrouse (Pterocles indicus)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  24. ^ "Lichtenstein's sandgrouse (Pterocles lichtensteinii)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  25. ^ "Namaqua sandgrouse (Pterocles namaqua)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  26. ^ "Black-bellied sandgrouse (Pterocles orientalis)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  27. ^ "Madagascan sandgrouse (Pterocles personatus)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  28. ^ "Four-banded sandgrouse (Pterocles quadricinctus)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  29. ^ "Spotted sandgrouse (Pterocles senegallus)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  30. ^ "Tibetan sandgrouse (Syrrhaptes tibetanus)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  31. ^ "Pallas's sandgrouse (Syrrhaptes paradoxus)". The Internet Bird Collection. Retrieved 2012-06-02.
  32. ^ "Chestnut Bellied Sandgrouse". Ultimate Upland. Archived from the original on 2012-11-04. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  33. ^ "IUCN Red List of Threatened Species". 2012.1. IUCN. Retrieved 2012-06-29.
  34. ^ Hume, J. P.; Walters, M. (2012). Extinct Birds. London: A & C Black. p. 133. ISBN 978-1-4081-5725-1.
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