Comb-crested jacana

Comb-crested jacana

Lotusbird, Lilytrotter

Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Family
Genus
SPECIES
Irediparra gallinacea

The comb-crested jacana (Irediparra gallinacea ), also known as the lotusbird or lilytrotter, is the only species of jacana in the genus Irediparra. Like other jacana species, it is adapted to the floating vegetation of tropical freshwater wetlands.

Appearance

This species is unmistakable. It has a black crown and hindneck with a fleshy red wattle covering the forehead and forecrown, contrasting with a white face and throat. The comb is pinker in breeding adults, more orange when not breeding. There is a broad black band on the lower breast with white belly. The underwing and flight feathers, which show most prominently in flight, are black. Back and upperwing mainly grey-brown with black primary coverts, rump and tail. The long legs with extremely long toes trail in flight. The male is slightly smaller than the female and measures 20–22 cm (7.9–8.7 in) in length and weighs 68–84 g (2.4–3.0 oz). The female measures 24–27 cm (9.4–10.6 in) in length and weighs 120–150 g (4.2–5.3 oz). The wingspan ranges from 39 to 46 cm (15 to 18 in).

Distribution

Geography

The bird occurs in south-eastern Borneo, the southern Philippines, Sulawesi, Moluccas, Lesser Sunda Islands, north and south-east New Guinea, New Britain (Lake Lalili), and northern and eastern Australia. Its habitat are large freshwater wetlands, swamps and lakes with abundant floating vegetation, such as water-lilies or water hyacinth, forming a mat on the water surface which it is able to walk on. Although the species is rare and localised it is not globally threatened.

Habits and Lifestyle

Seasonal behavior
Bird's call

Diet and Nutrition

It eats seeds and aquatic insects gleaned from floating vegetation on the water surface.

Mating Habits

The comb-crested jacana is polyandrous. It builds a flimsy nest on floating or emergent vegetation, in which the female lays four lustrous, pale brown eggs covered by black markings. Only males incubate. The young hatch well-developed and soon leave the nest.

Population

References

1. Comb-crested jacana Wikipedia article - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comb-crested_jacana
2. Comb-crested jacana on The IUCN Red List site - https://www.iucnredlist.org/species/22693540/93411572
3. Xeno-canto bird call - https://xeno-canto.org/707010

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