Dictionary Definition
loon
Noun
1 a worthless lazy fellow
2 large somewhat primitive fish-eating diving
bird of the northern hemisphere having webbed feet placed far back;
related to the grebes [syn: diver]
3 a person with confused ideas; incapable of
serious thought [syn: addle-head,
addlehead, birdbrain]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes: -uːn
Noun
Translations
Noun
- Any of various birds, of the order Gaviiformes, of North America and Europe that dive for fish and have a short tail, webbed feet and a yodeling cry.
Synonyms
- (bird of order Gaviiformes): diver
Translations
bird of order Gaviiformes
References
- Websters}}
Dutch
Pronunciation
Extensive Definition
The loons (e.g. North America) or divers (e.g.
UK/Ireland) are a group of aquatic birds found in many parts of
North
America and northern Europe. A loon is
the size of a large duck or
small goose, which it somewhat resembles in shape when
swimming.
The plumage is largely
black-and-white, with grey on the head and neck in some species,
and a white belly, and all species have a spear-shaped bill. All
living species of loons are members of one genus (Gavia in a family
(Gaviidae), and order
(Gaviiformes) all of their own.
The European name "diver" comes from the bird's
habit of catching fish by swimming calmly along the surface and
then abruptly plunging into the water. The North American name loon
comes from the bird's haunting, yodeling cry.
Ecology
Loons are excellent swimmers, using their feet to propel themselves above and under water and their wings for assistance. Because their feet are far back on the body, loons are poorly adapted to moving on land. They usually avoid going onto land, except when nesting.All loons are decent fliers, though the larger
species have some difficulty taking off and thus must swim into the
wind to pick up enough velocity to get airborne. Only the Red-throated
Diver can take off from land. Once airborne, their considerable
stamina allows them to migrate long distances southwards in winter,
where they reside in coastal waters. Loons can live as long as 30
years.
Diet
Loons find their prey by sight. They eat fish, amphibians, and crustaceans. Specifically, they eat crayfish, frogs, snails, salamanders and leeches. They prefer clear lakes because they can see their prey more easily through the water. The loon uses its pointy bill to stab or grasp prey. They eat vertebrate prey headfirst to facilitate swallowing, and swallow all their prey whole.To help digestion, loons swallow small pebbles
from the bottoms of lakes. Similar to grit eaten by chickens, these gastroliths may assist the
loon's gizzard in
crushing the hard parts of the loon's food such as the exoskeletons of crustaceans
and the bones of frogs and salamanders. The gastroliths may also be
involved in stomach cleaning as an aid to regurgitation of
indigestible food parts.
Loons may inadvertently ingest small lead
pellets, released by anglers and hunters, which will slowly lead to
the loon's death by lead poisoning. Jurisdictions that have banned
the use of lead shot and sinkers include Maine, New
Hampshire, Vermont, some areas
of Massachusetts,
Yellowstone
National Park, Great
Britain, Canada, and Denmark.
Reproduction
During the summer, loons nest on fresh water lakes and/or large ponds. Smaller bodies of water (up to 0.5 km²) will usually only have one pair. Larger lakes may have more than one pair, with each pair occupying a bay or section of the lake.Loons build their nests close to the water,
preferring sites that are completely surrounded by water. They may
use the same site from year to year. Loons will use a variety of
materials found nearby to build their nests including pine tree
needles, leaves, grass, moss, and sometimes clumps of mud. Both the
male and female help with nest building and incubation, which
usually lasts 26-31 days. If the eggs are lost, the pair may
re-nest, often in the same general location.
Usually one or two eggs are laid in June. Loon
chicks are precocial,
able to swim right away, but are often seen riding on their
parents' back. This behavior allows the chicks to rest, conserve
heat, and avoid predators such as large carnivorous fish, snapping
turtles, gulls, eagles, and crows. After a day or two, chicks cease
returning to the nest but remain in their parent's company.
Chicks remain with and are fed exclusively by
their parents for about eight weeks. After eight weeks, chicks will
begin to dive for some of their own food. By 11 or 12 weeks of age,
chicks are able to gather almost all of their own food and may be
able to fly.
A pair may mate for life, although banding
studies have shown that loons will sometimes switch mates after a
failed nesting attempt and even between nesting attempts in the
same season. Male loons appear more faithful to breeding
territories than to mates.
Systematics and evolution
All living species are classed in the genus Gavia.- Red-throated Diver or Red-throated Loon, Gavia stellata.
- Black-throated Diver or Arctic Loon, Gavia arctica.
- Pacific Diver or Pacific Loon, Gavia pacifica - formerly included in G. arctica
- Great Northern Diver or Common Loon, Gavia immer.
- White-billed Diver or Yellow-billed Loon, Gavia adamsii
Relationships and evolution
The loons were formerly often considered to be the most ancient of the northern hemisphere bird families; this idea grew basically out of the perceived similarity of shape and (probably) habits between loons and the entirely unrelated extinct Cretaceous order Hesperornithiformes. However, the two groups are merely the product of convergent evolution and adapted in a similar way to a similar ecological niche.More recently, it has become clear that the
Anseriformes
(waterfowl) and the Galliformes are
the most ancient groups of modern birds, while loons belong to a
more modern radiation. What is also generally accepted as a fact is
that loons and grebes are
not closely related at all, but rather one of the most stunning
examples of convergence in the known birds. The Sibley-Ahlquist
taxonomy still allied the loons with the grebes in its paraphyletic
"Ciconiiformes", and it is almost certain that the relationships of
loons lie with some of the orders united therein. Alternatively,
loons have tentatively been considered to share a rather close
relationship with waders,
penguins or procellariiform
seabirds.
The conflicting molecular data is not much
resolved by the fossil
record. Modern loons are only known with certainty since the
Eocene, but
by that time almost all modern bird orders are known or strongly
suspected to have existed anyway. The Late Eocene to Early Miocene genus
Colymboides was
widespread in Western and Central Europe; it is usually placed in
the Gaviidae already, but may actually be more primitive; it is
quite distinct from modern loons and could well be paraphyletic.
From the genus Gavia, about a dozen fossil species have been
discovered to date, which are known from the Early Miocene onwards
and had a more southerly distribution, like today's California,
Florida and
Italy:
- Gavia egeriana Švec, 1982 (Early Miocene of Czechoslovakia -? Late Miocene of E USA)
- Gavia schultzi Mlíkovský, 1998 (Middle Miocene of Sankt Margarethen, Austria)
- Gavia sp. (Calvert? Middle Miocene or Maryland, USA)
- Gavia spp. (Middle Miocene of Steinheim, Germany) - 3 species
- Gavia brodkorbi (Late Miocene of Orange County, USA)
- Gavia moldavica Kessler, 1984 (Late Miocene of Chişinău, Moldova)
- Gavia paradoxa Umanska, 1981 (Late Miocene of Čebotarevka, Ukraine)
- Gavia concinna Wetmore, 1940 (Late Miocene/Early Pliocene -? Late Pliocene of W and SE USA)
- Gavia fortis Olson & Rasmussen, 2001 (Yorktown Early Pliocene of Lee Creek Mine, South Carolina, USA)
- Gavia sp. (Early Pliocene of Kerč Peninsula, Ukraine)
- Gavia cf. concinna (Middle Pliocene of San Diego, California, USA)
- Gavia palaeodytes Wetmore, 1943 (Middle Pliocene of Pierce, Florida, USA)
- Gavia sp. (Early Pleistocene of Kairy, Ukraine)
"Gavia" portisi from the Late
Pliocene of Orciano
Pisano (Italy) is known from
a cervical
vertebra that may or may not have been from a loon. If so, it
was from a bird slightly smaller than Common Loon.
Older authors were quite sure the bone was indeed from a Gavia and
even considered G. concinna a possibly junior
synonym of it. This is now regarded as rather unlikely for
reasons of biogeography. Interestingly, an Early
Pliocene loon skull form Empoli (Italy) was
referred to G. concinna. The vertebra may now be lost, making "G."
portisi a nomen
dubium.
In addition, there are some much older forms that
are sometimes assigned to the Gaviiformes. From the Late
Cretaceous, the genera Lonchodytes
(Lance
Formation, Wyoming) and Neogaeornis
(Quinriquina
Formation, Chile) have been
described; the latter might have been a primitive loon, but
possibly a hesperornithiform,
and both have sometimes been allied with the orders which are
considered related to loons. Doubtfully valid and surrounced by
considerable dispute is the supposed Late Cretaceous loon Polarornis
(Seymour
Island, Antarctica).
Eupterornis
from the Paleocene of
France has some features reminiscent of loons, but others seem more
similar to Charadriiformes
such as gulls (Laridae). A piece
of a carpometacarpus
supposedly from Oligocene rocks
near Lusk,
Wyoming was described as Gaviella
pusilla, but this also shows some similarities to the plotopterids.
Parascaniornis, sometimes allied to the loons, has more recently
determined to be a junior
synonym of the hesperornithiform Baptornis.
Loons in popular culture
The Common Loon is the provincial bird of Ontario and is depicted on the Canadian one-dollar coin, which has come to be known affectionately as the "loonie". It is also the official state bird of Minnesota, and Mercer, Wisconsin promotes itself as the "Loon Capital of the World". Loons are mentioned several times in the film On Golden Pond.Footnotes
References
- (1953): A Review of the Pliocene Loons. Condor 55(4): 211-214. PDF fulltext DjVu fulltext
- (2003): Minnesota. Compass Point Books. ISBN 0756503159
- (2004): A partial skeleton of a new fossil loon (Aves, Gaviiformes) from the early Oligocene of Germany with preserved stomach content. J. Ornithol. 145: 281-286 PDF fulltext
- (2007): Let's Get the Lead Out! Non-lead alternatives for fishing tackle. Version of June, 2007. Retrieved 2007-JUL-23.
- (2002): Cenozoic Birds of the World, Part 1: Europe. Ninox Press, Prague. ISBN 80-901105-3-8 PDF fulltext
- (2007): Animal Field Guide: Common Loon. Retrieved 2007-MAY-12.
- (2005): Weird Wisconsin: Your Travel Guide to Wisconsin's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets. Sterling Publishing. ISBN 0760759448
- (1985): Section X.I. Gaviiformes. In: Farner, D.S.; King, J.R. & Parkes, Kenneth C. (eds.): Avian Biology 8: 202-214. Academic Press, New York.
- (2004): Across The Land: A Canadian Journey Of Discovery. Trafford Publishing. ISBN 1412022762
- (1935): Colymbus, Hesperornis, Podiceps:, ein Vergleich ihrer hinteren Extremität. J. Ornithol. 80(1): 161-247. [Article in German]
- (1941): An Unknown Loon from the Miocene Fossil Beds of Maryland. Auk 58(4): 567. PDF fulltext DjVu fulltext
- (2005): Common Loons at Seney NWR, June 2005. PDF fulltext
- (2007): A review of gastrolith function with implications for fossil vertebrates and a revised classification. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 52: 1-16 PDF fulltext
External links
- Video of nesting loons. Video captures the laying and hatching of two eggs on Lake George in Minnesota.
- Tree of Life Gaviidae
- Loon sounds
- Loon videos on the Internet Bird Collection
- Loon Preservation Committee
- Diving Birds of North America, by Paul Johnsgard
loon in Czech: Potáplice
loon in Catalan: Gaviformes
loon in Danish: Lommer
loon in German: Seetaucher
loon in Estonian: Kaur
loon in Spanish: Colimbo
loon in Esperanto: Gaviedoj
loon in French: Plongeon (oiseau)
loon in Italian: Gaviiformes
loon in Hebrew: צוללנאים
loon in Dutch: Duikers (vogels)
loon in Norwegian: Lommer
loon in Japanese: アビ目
loon in Norwegian Nynorsk: Lom
loon in Polish: Nury
loon in Portuguese: Mobelha
loon in Russian: Гагарообразные
loon in Slovak: Potáplica
loon in Slovenian: Slapnik
loon in Finnish: Kuikat
loon in Swedish: Lommar
loon in Chinese: 潜鸟属
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Boeotian, aliene, bedlamite, block, borderline case, clod, crackbrain, crackpot, dement, demoniac, dimwit, dolt, donkey, dope, dullard, dumb cluck, dumbbell, dummy, dunce, energumen, fanatic, flake, fou, gowk, idiot, jobbernowl, kook, lackwit, lamebrain, lightweight, looby, loony, lunatic, madman, maniac, meshuggenah, niais, nincompoop, ninny, ninnyhammer, nitwit, noddy, non compos, noncompos, nut, phrenetic, put, raving lunatic, screwball, stupid, thickwit, weirdo, witling