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Northern Gannet
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The eye-catching Northern Gannet is the largest seabird found in northern Atlantic waters — about the size of a Black-footed or Laysan Albatross — and belongs to the same family as Brown and Red-footed Boobies. It shares a similar pelagic lifestyle to these warm-water birds, spending most of its life in flight over the sea, coming to land only to nest.
The Northern Gannet's genus name Morus comes from the Ancient Greek word for "foolish," and refers to this bird's perceived fearlessness, particularly on its breeding grounds, where it can be easily approached. Its species name bassanus is a nod to the Bass Rock, an island off the east coast of Scotland where the largest breeding colony in the world can be found.
An adult Northern Gannet is easily identified by its large size and gleaming white plumage, accented by a golden-yellow head and neck and jet-black wingtips. Its long, narrow wings, tapered tail, and cigar-shaped body give it a distinctive shape in flight. And the way it hunts for food is also an unforgettable sight. How do Northern Gannets forage?
Video clips: Timothy Barksdale/Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology (405118) and ggw/Shutterstock
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--Diver Deluxe--
The Northern Gannet hunts by "plunge-diving," flying up to 100 feet above the water, then plummeting toward the surface when it spots prey. It folds back its wings just before it slices into the sea, making a sleek, streamlined profile that produces little or no splash. This steep dive, which can reach speeds of 60 miles per hour, can propel the gannet as far as 16 feet under, like an avian torpedo. Once below the surface, the gannet can continue swimming after prey, using both its wings and webbed feet to dive as deep as 70 feet. It can stay submerged up to 30 seconds while hunting.
Several adaptations allow the Northern Gannet to regularly make these high dives. A reinforced skull, specially adapted neck muscles, and a bone plate at the base of the bill all help absorb impact with the water, while air sacs under the skin both help reduce initial impact and lend buoyancy, allowing this bird to pop back to the surface more easily. Binocular vision, facilitated by forward-facing eyes, allows the gannet to spot prey from high in the air and judge distances accurately as it dives. A gannet also has no external nostrils, which keeps water from being forced into its respiratory system during high-speed plunges into the ocean. Instead, its nostrils are behind the base of its bill, and open into its mouth rather than to the outside.
--Hunting From On High--
A talented plunge-diver like many other seabirds ranging from the Brown Pelican to Royal Tern, the Northern Gannet preys chiefly upon on schooling fish, squid, and shrimp. A swirling and diving group of hunting Northern Gannets is an unforgettable sight, resembling an avian snowstorm, as dozens of the big white birds hover high in the air, arrow into the sea, and pop back to the surface.
The Northern Gannet also lands on the water to feed, dipping its head under or diving from the surface. It sometimes steals prey from other seabirds, and is pirated in turn by more aggressive birds such as skuas.
Northern Gannets often hunt in large groups in tandem with dolphins, whales, and seals, which drive schools of fish closer to the surface and within reach of the foraging birds. Like many seabirds, the gannet also follows fishing vessels for offal.
--Gregarious Gannetries--
Northern Gannet pairs mate for life, and often return to the same area and nest each year. Pairs reinforce their bond through mutual preening, nape nibbling, and "fencing," where the pair knocks bills together. Both male and female build their mound-shaped nest out of seaweed, mud, and grasses, refurbishing and reusing the nest in subsequent years. Increasingly, nests also incorporate human-made materials such as plastic trash and fishing gear (see “Gannets Run a Gauntlet,” below).
The female gannet lays a single blue-green egg, and both male and female take turns brooding it atop their webbed feet. The egg hatches into a featherless, helpless chick, which requires constant tending and feeding from the parental pair. The hatchling grows quickly, and by the time it fledges it's too chubby to fly far, instead gliding down to the ocean, where it remains on the water's surface for several weeks, sustained by its fat stores while it exercises its flight muscles and learns to dive. Once it leaves the nest, a young gannet is on its own.
The Northern Gannet's genus name Morus comes from the Ancient Greek word for "foolish," and refers to this bird's perceived fearlessness, particularly on its breeding grounds, where it can be easily approached. Its species name bassanus is a nod to the Bass Rock, an island off the east coast of Scotland where the largest breeding colony in the world can be found.
An adult Northern Gannet is easily identified by its large size and gleaming white plumage, accented by a golden-yellow head and neck and jet-black wingtips. Its long, narrow wings, tapered tail, and cigar-shaped body give it a distinctive shape in flight. And the way it hunts for food is also an unforgettable sight. How do Northern Gannets forage?
Video clips: Timothy Barksdale/Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology (405118) and ggw/Shutterstock
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--Diver Deluxe--
The Northern Gannet hunts by "plunge-diving," flying up to 100 feet above the water, then plummeting toward the surface when it spots prey. It folds back its wings just before it slices into the sea, making a sleek, streamlined profile that produces little or no splash. This steep dive, which can reach speeds of 60 miles per hour, can propel the gannet as far as 16 feet under, like an avian torpedo. Once below the surface, the gannet can continue swimming after prey, using both its wings and webbed feet to dive as deep as 70 feet. It can stay submerged up to 30 seconds while hunting.
Several adaptations allow the Northern Gannet to regularly make these high dives. A reinforced skull, specially adapted neck muscles, and a bone plate at the base of the bill all help absorb impact with the water, while air sacs under the skin both help reduce initial impact and lend buoyancy, allowing this bird to pop back to the surface more easily. Binocular vision, facilitated by forward-facing eyes, allows the gannet to spot prey from high in the air and judge distances accurately as it dives. A gannet also has no external nostrils, which keeps water from being forced into its respiratory system during high-speed plunges into the ocean. Instead, its nostrils are behind the base of its bill, and open into its mouth rather than to the outside.
--Hunting From On High--
A talented plunge-diver like many other seabirds ranging from the Brown Pelican to Royal Tern, the Northern Gannet preys chiefly upon on schooling fish, squid, and shrimp. A swirling and diving group of hunting Northern Gannets is an unforgettable sight, resembling an avian snowstorm, as dozens of the big white birds hover high in the air, arrow into the sea, and pop back to the surface.
The Northern Gannet also lands on the water to feed, dipping its head under or diving from the surface. It sometimes steals prey from other seabirds, and is pirated in turn by more aggressive birds such as skuas.
Northern Gannets often hunt in large groups in tandem with dolphins, whales, and seals, which drive schools of fish closer to the surface and within reach of the foraging birds. Like many seabirds, the gannet also follows fishing vessels for offal.
--Gregarious Gannetries--
Northern Gannet pairs mate for life, and often return to the same area and nest each year. Pairs reinforce their bond through mutual preening, nape nibbling, and "fencing," where the pair knocks bills together. Both male and female build their mound-shaped nest out of seaweed, mud, and grasses, refurbishing and reusing the nest in subsequent years. Increasingly, nests also incorporate human-made materials such as plastic trash and fishing gear (see “Gannets Run a Gauntlet,” below).
The female gannet lays a single blue-green egg, and both male and female take turns brooding it atop their webbed feet. The egg hatches into a featherless, helpless chick, which requires constant tending and feeding from the parental pair. The hatchling grows quickly, and by the time it fledges it's too chubby to fly far, instead gliding down to the ocean, where it remains on the water's surface for several weeks, sustained by its fat stores while it exercises its flight muscles and learns to dive. Once it leaves the nest, a young gannet is on its own.