Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}} Template:Redirect Template:Pp-semi-indef Template:Use dmy dates Template:Automatic taxobox
Flamingos or flamingoesTemplate:Efn (Template:IPAc-en) are a type of wading bird in the family Phoenicopteridae, which is the only extant family in the order Phoenicopteriformes. There are four flamingo species distributed throughout the Americas (including the Caribbean), and two species native to Afro-Eurasia.
A group of flamingoes is called a "flamboyance",<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> or a "stand".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
EtymologyEdit
The name flamingo comes from Portuguese or Spanish {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Template:Gloss; in turn, the word comes from Provençal {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} – a combination of {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Template:Gloss and a Germanic-like suffix -ing. The word may also have been influenced by the Spanish ethnonym {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Template:Gloss or Template:Gloss. The name of the genus, Phoenicopterus, is Template:Ety;<ref>Template:OEtymD</ref> other genera names include Phoeniconaias, which means Template:Gloss, and Phoenicoparrus, which means Template:Gloss.
Taxonomy and systematicsEdit
The family Phoenicopteridae was introduced by the French zoologist Charles Lucien Bonaparte in 1831, with Phoenicopterus as the type genus.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
Traditionally, the long-legged Ciconiiformes, probably a paraphyletic assemblage, have been considered the flamingos' closest relatives and the family was included in the order. Usually, the ibises and spoonbills of the Threskiornithidae were considered their closest relatives within this order. Earlier genetic studies, such as those of Charles Sibley and colleagues, also supported this relationship.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Relationships to the waterfowl were considered as well,<ref name=Sibley69>Template:Cite journal</ref> especially as flamingos are parasitized by feather lice of the genus Anaticola, which are otherwise exclusively found on ducks and geese.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The peculiar presbyornithids were used to argue for a close relationship between flamingos, waterfowl, and waders.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> A 2002 paper concluded they are waterfowl,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> but a 2014 comprehensive study of bird orders found that flamingos and grebes are not waterfowl, but rather are part of Columbea, along with doves, sandgrouse, and mesites.<ref name=Jarvis2014>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Relationship with grebesEdit
Recent molecular studies have suggested a relation with grebes,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> while morphological evidence also strongly supports a relationship between flamingos and grebes. They hold at least 11 morphological traits in common, which are not found in other birds. Many of these characteristics have been previously identified on flamingos, but not on grebes.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The fossil palaelodids can be considered evolutionarily, and ecologically, intermediate between flamingos and grebes.<ref name=Gottingen>Template:Cite journal</ref>
For the grebe-flamingo clade, the taxon Mirandornithes ("miraculous birds" due to their extreme divergence and apomorphies) has been proposed. Alternatively, they could be placed in one order, with Phoenocopteriformes taking priority.<ref name=Gottingen/>
PhylogenyEdit
The cladogram below showing the phylogenetic relationships between the six extant flamingo species is based on a study by Roberto Frias-Soler and collaborators that was published in 2022.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Template:Clade
SpeciesEdit
Six extant flamingo species are recognized by most sources, and were formerly placed in one genus (have common characteristics) – Phoenicopterus. As a result of a 2014 publication,<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> the family was reclassified into two genera.<ref>Gill, F and D Donsker (Eds). (2016). IOC World Bird List (v 6.3).</ref> In 2020, the family had three recognized genera, according to HBW.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Image | Species | Geographic location | |
---|---|---|---|
File:Flamant rose Salines de Thyna.jpg | Greater flamingoTemplate:Pb(Phoenicopterus roseus) | Old World | Parts of Africa, S. Europe and S. and SW Asia (most widespread flamingo). |
File:Lesser Flamingo RWD.jpg | Lesser flamingoTemplate:Pb(Phoeniconaias minor) | Africa (e.g. Great Rift Valley) to NW India (most numerous flamingo). | |
File:Westfalenpark-100821-17767-Flamingo.jpg | Chilean flamingoTemplate:Pb(Phoenicopterus chilensis) | New World | Temperate S. South America. |
File:James Flamingo.jpg | James's or Puna flamingoTemplate:Pb(Phoenicoparrus jamesi) | High Andes in Peru, Chile, Bolivia and Argentina. | |
File:Two andeanflamingo june2003 arp.jpg | Andean flamingoTemplate:Pb(Phoenicoparrus andinus) | High Andes in Peru, Chile, Bolivia and Argentina. | |
File:Greater flamingo galapagos.JPG | American or Caribbean flamingoTemplate:Pb(Phoenicopterus ruber) | Caribbean islands, Caribbean Mexico, southern Florida,<ref name=Florida>Scientists: Florida flamingos are native to the state, News-Press, Chad Gillis, February 23, 2018. Retrieved May 29, 2019.</ref> Belize, coastal Colombia, northern Brazil, Venezuela and Galápagos Islands. |
Prehistoric species of flamingo:
- Elornis? Milne-Edwards, 1868 (Late Oligocene of France, Europe)<ref name=M05>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Harrisonavis (Gervais, 1852) (Middle Oligocene–Middle Miocene of C. Europe)<ref name=torres15>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Leakeyornis (Harrison and Walker, 1976) (Early to Middle Miocene of Lake Victoria, Kenya)<ref name=RW83>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Phoeniconaias proeses (De Vis 1905) (Pliocene of Lake Kanunka, Australia)<ref name=RTRM87>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Phoeniconaias siamensis Cheneval et al. 1991 (Early Miocene of Mae Long Reservoir, Thailand)<ref name=C91>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Phoeniconotius Miller 1963 (Late Oligocene of South Australia)<ref name=M63>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Phoenicopterus copei (Miller 1963) (Late Pleistocene of North America and Mexico)<ref name=H55/>
- Phoenicopterus floridanus (Brodkorb 1953) (Early Pliocene of Florida)<ref name=B53>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Phoenicopterus minutus Howard 1955 (Late Pleistocene of California, US)<ref name=H55>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Phoenicopterus novaehollandiae Miller 1963 (Late Oligocene of South Australia)<ref name=M63/>
- Phoenicopterus stocki (Miller 1944) (Middle Pliocene of Rincón, Mexico)<ref name=M44>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- Xenorhynchopsis De Vis 1905 (Pliocene to Pleistocene of Australia)<ref name=RTRM87/>
DescriptionEdit
Flamingos usually stand on one leg with the other tucked beneath the body. The reason for this behaviour is not fully understood. One theory is that standing on one leg allows the birds to conserve more body heat, given that they spend a significant amount of time wading in cold water.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> However, the behaviour also takes place in warm water and is also observed in birds that do not typically stand in water. An alternative theory is that standing on one leg reduces the energy expenditure for producing muscular effort to stand and balance on one leg. A study on cadavers showed that the one-legged pose could be held without any muscle activity, while living flamingos demonstrate substantially less body sway in a one-legged posture.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
While walking, a flamingo's legs may appear to bend backwards. This appearance is due to the middle joint on their legs being their ankle, not their knee.<ref name=":03">Template:Cite book</ref> Flamingos also have webbed feet that aid with swimming and they may stamp their feet in the mud to stir up food from the bottom.<ref name=":03" /><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
Flamingos are capable flyers, and flamingos in captivity often require wing clipping to prevent escape. A pair of African flamingos which had not yet had their wings clipped escaped from the Wichita, Kansas, zoo in 2005. One was spotted in Texas 14 years later. It had been seen previously by birders in Texas, Wisconsin and Louisiana.<ref>Fugitive flamingo spotted in Texas 14 years after escaping a Kansas zoo during storm, Wichita Eagle, Kaitlyn Alanis, May 27, 2019. Retrieved May 29, 2019.</ref>
Young flamingos hatch with grayish-red plumage, but adults range from light pink to bright red due to aqueous bacteria and beta-carotene obtained from their food supply. A well-fed, healthy flamingo is more vibrantly colored, thus a more desirable mate; a white or pale flamingo, however, is usually unhealthy or malnourished. Captive flamingos are a notable exception; even if adequately nourished, they may turn a pale pink if they are not fed carotene at levels comparable to the wild.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
The greater flamingo is the tallest of the six different species of flamingos, standing at Template:Convert with a weight up to Template:Convert, and the shortest flamingo species (the lesser) has a height of Template:Convert and weighs Template:Convert. Flamingos can have a wingspan as small as Template:Convert to as big as Template:Convert.<ref>Bradford, Alina. 2014. Flamingo Facts: Food Turns Feathers Pink. September 18. Accessed March 2018. https://www.livescience.com/27322-flamingos.html</ref>
Flamingos can open their bills by raising the upper jaw as well as by dropping the lower.<ref>Template:Cite journal, page 409.</ref>
Behavior and ecologyEdit
FeedingEdit
Flamingos are omnivores who filter-feed on brine shrimp, cyanobacteria, larvae, insects, mollusks and crustaceans. Their bills are adapted to separate mud and silt from the food they eat and are uniquely used upside-down. The filtering of food is assisted by hairy structures called lamellae, which line the mandible, and their large, rough tongue. By rapidly retracting their head, flamingos generate vortexes that stir up sediment and shrimp. Flamingos further induce directional flows by chattering their beaks, while their stomping creates eddies to trap invertebrates.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
The pink or reddish color of flamingos comes from carotenoids in their diet of animal and plant plankton. American flamingos are a brighter red color because of the beta carotene availability in their food while the lesser flamingos are a paler pink due to ingesting a smaller amount of this pigment. These carotenoids are broken down into pigments by liver enzymes.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> The source of this varies by species, and affects the color saturation. Flamingos whose sole diet is blue-green algae are darker than those that get it second-hand by eating animals that have digested blue-green algae.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Though flamingos prefer to drink freshwater, they are equipped with glands under their eyes that remove extra salt from their bodies. This organ allows them to drink saltwater as well.<ref name=":02">Template:Cite book</ref>
Vocalization soundsEdit
Flamingos are considered very noisy birds with their noises and vocalizations ranging from grunting or growling to nasal honking. Vocalizations play an important role in parent-chick recognition, ritualized displays, and keeping large flocks together. Variations in vocalizations exist in the voices of different species of flamingos.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Life cycleEdit
Flamingos are very social birds; they live in colonies whose population can number in the thousands. These large colonies are believed to serve three purposes for the flamingos: avoiding predators, maximizing food intake, and using scarce suitable nesting sites more efficiently.<ref name=Picket1994>Template:Cite journal</ref> Before breeding, flamingo colonies split into breeding groups of about 15 to 50 birds. Both males and females in these groups perform synchronized ritual displays.<ref name=Ogilvie1986>Ogilvie, Malcolm; Carol Ogilvie (1986). Flamingos. Gloucester, UK: Alan Sutton Publishing Limited. Template:ISBN. Template:Oclc.</ref> The members of a group stand together and display to each other by stretching their necks upwards, then uttering calls while head-flagging, and then flapping their wings.<ref name="Studer-Thiersch 1975">Studer-Thiersch, A. (1975). "Basle Zoo", pp. 121–130 in N. Duplaix-Hall and J. Kear, editors. Flamingos. Berkhamsted, United Kingdom: T. & A. D. Poyser, Template:ISBN.</ref> The displays do not seem directed towards an individual, but occur randomly.<ref name="Studer-Thiersch 1975"/> These displays stimulate "synchronous nesting" (see below) and help pair up those birds that do not already have mates.<ref name=Ogilvie1986/>
Flamingos form strong pair bonds, although in larger colonies, flamingos sometimes change mates, presumably because more mates are available to choose.<ref name="Studer-Thiersch 2000">Template:Cite journal</ref> Flamingo pairs establish and defend nesting territories. They locate a suitable spot on the mudflat to build a nest (the female usually selects the place).<ref name="Studer-Thiersch 1975"/> Copulation usually occurs during nest building, which is sometimes interrupted by another flamingo pair trying to commandeer the nesting site for their use. Flamingos aggressively defend their nesting sites. Both the male and the female contribute to building the nest, and to protecting the nest and egg.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Same-sex pairs have been reported.<ref name="Bag-Flamingo">Template:Cite book</ref>
After the chicks hatch, the only parental expense is feeding.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Both the male and the female feed their chicks with a kind of crop milk, produced in glands lining the whole of the upper digestive tract (not just the crop). The hormone prolactin stimulates production. Crop milk contains both fat and protein, as with mammalian milk, but unlike mammalian milk, it contains no carbohydrates.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> (Pigeons and doves also produce crop milk, though just in the glands lining the crop, which contains less fat and more protein than flamingo crop milk.)<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
For the first six days after the chicks hatch, the adults and chicks stay in the nesting sites. At around 7–12 days old, the chicks begin to move out of their nests and explore their surroundings. When they are two weeks old, the chicks congregate in groups, called "microcrèches", and their parents leave them alone. After a while, the microcrèches merge into "crèches" containing thousands of chicks. Chicks that do not stay in their crèches are vulnerable to predators.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> When young flamingos are around three to three and a half months old, their flight feathers will finish growing in, allowing them to fly.<ref name=":04">Template:Cite book</ref>
- Flamingo and offspring.jpg
American flamingo and offspring: The Template:Linktext (curved) bill is adapted to bottom scooping.
- Chilean Flamingo Feeding.jpg
Chilean flamingo feeding its young
- Large number of flamingos at Lake Nakuru.jpg
Colony of lesser flamingos at Lake Nakuru
Status and conservationEdit
In captivityEdit
The first flamingo hatched in a European zoo was a Chilean flamingo at Zoo Basel in Switzerland in 1958. Since then, over 389 flamingos have grown up in Basel and been distributed to other zoos around the globe.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Greater, a greater flamingo who was at least 83 years old and believed to be the oldest in the world, died at the Adelaide Zoo in Australia in January 2014.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Zoos have used mirrors to improve flamingo breeding behaviour. The mirrors are thought to give the flamingos the impression that they are in a larger flock than they actually are.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Relationship with humansEdit
Ancient Roman cuisineEdit
While many different kinds of birds were valued items in Roman food, flamingos were among the most prized in Ancient Roman cuisine. An early reference to their consumption, and especially of their tongues, is found in Pliny the Elder, who states in the Natural History:
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[Translated:] Apicius, that very deepest whirlpool of all our epicures, has informed us that the tongue of the phœnicopterus is of the most exquisite flavour.{{#if:Natural History, liber X, chapter 67<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>English (John Bostock, M.D., F.R.S., H.T. Riley, Esq., B.A., 1855)</ref>|{{#if:|}}
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Although a few recipes for flamingos are found in Apicius' extant works, none refer specifically to flamingo tongues. The three flamingo recipes in the {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} (On the Subject of Cooking) involve the whole creature:
- 220: roasted with an egg sauce, a recipe for wood pigeons, squabs, fattened fowl; flamingo is an afterthought.
- 230: boiled; parrot may be substituted.
- 231: roasted with a must sauce.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Suetonius mentions flamingo tongues in his Life of Vitellius:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
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Most notorious of all was the dinner given by his brother to celebrate the emperor's arrival in Rome, at which two thousand of the choicest fishes and seven thousand birds are said to have been served. He himself eclipsed even this at the dedication of a platter, which on account of its enormous size he called the "Shield of Minerva, Defender of the City." In this he mingled the livers of pike, the brains of pheasants and peacocks, the tongues of flamingoes and the milt of lampreys, brought by his captains and triremes from the whole empire, from Parthia to the Spanish strait.{{#if:Suetonius, Life of Vitellius<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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Martial, the poet, devoted an ironic epigram, alluding to flamingo tongues:
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[Translated:] My red wing gives me my name; but it is my tongue that is considered savoury by epicures. What, if my tongue had been able to sing?{{#if:Epigrammata 71, Book 13<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>|{{#if:|}}
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There is also a mention of flamingo brains in a later, highly contentious source, detailing, in the life of Elagabalus, a food item not apparently to his liking as much as camels' heels and parrot tongues, in the belief that the latter was a prophylactic:
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In imitation of Apicius he frequently ate camels-heels and also cocks-combs taken from the living birds, and the tongues of peacocks and nightingales, because he was told that one who ate them was immune from the plague. He served to the palace-attendants, moreover, huge platters heaped up with the viscera of mullets, and flamingo-brains, partridge-eggs, thrush-brains, and the heads of parrots, pheasants, and peacocks.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
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OtherEdit
- In the Americas, the Moche people of ancient Peru worshipped nature.<ref>Benson, Elizabeth (1972). The Mochica: A Culture of Peru. New York: Praeger Press.</ref> They placed emphasis on animals, and often depicted flamingos in their art.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- The Ancient Egyptian god Set is depicted with a flamingo head in the Book of the Faiyum.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
- Flamingos are the national bird of the Bahamas.
- Andean miners have killed flamingos for their fat, believing that it would cure tuberculosis.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- In the United States, pink plastic flamingos are sometimes used as lawn ornaments.<ref name=CSM>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> They were first designed by Don Featherstone in 1957.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite journal</ref> Their popularity was influenced in part by the prevalence of flamingo souvenirs in Florida along with the Flamingo grand hotel in Miami Beach, prompting the correlation of flamingos with style and wealth.<ref name=":0" />
NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
Template:Sister project Template:Sister project
- Flamingo Resource Centre
- Flamingo videos and photos on the Internet Bird Collection
Template:Birds Template:Flamingos Template:Taxonbar Template:Authority control