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A close look at a Parakeet Auklet. |
Parakeet Auklets are in the family of birds known as the Alcidae
which are commonly referred to as the auks. The Alcidae family consists of murres,
puffins, murrelets, and other auks. All of the birds in this family are
characterized by their ability to fly through the air as well as dive underwater using
their wings to swim. Like all seabirds, Parakeet Auklets spend most of their lives at sea,
coming to land only to breed and raise young. They breed sometimes in huge numbers on
coastal headlands and islands throughout Alaska and Asia. Parakeet Auklets got their name
because of their unusually shaped bill, which is almost round like that of a parrot. This
unique bill shape helps them to feed on their favorite foods of slimy jellyfish and
zooplankton. Since jellyfish are relatively slow moving, Parakeet Auklets do not need to
swim as fast or dive as deep as other alcids that feed on small fish. When they come to
land to breed, they scramble around quite well, despite their large webbed feet and
pot-bellied appearance. Auklet breeding colonies are noisy affairs as thousands of males
screech and whinny to advertise their presence. They usually nest in the
crevices of rocks or under the shelter of boulders, but they are very capable of digging
burrows in the soil to nest in. There they lay a single white egg that is incubated by
both parents. The chick stays in the nest site until fully grown, where it waits for its
parents to return from sea with food. When the chick has grown enough to fly, it leaves
its crevice at night and flies out to sea. Its parents stop taking care of it once it
leaves the nest and so it must quickly learn to swim and find food on its own. |