Black noddy
The black noddy, also known as white-capped noddy, is a species of tern in the family Laridae. It is a medium-sized seabird with black plumage and a white cap that closely resembles the lesser noddy with which it was at one time considered conspecific. The black noddy has slightly darker plumage and dark rather than pale lores.
Taxonomy
The black noddy was first formally described by German naturalist and lawyer Friedrich Boie in 1844 under its current binomial name. The genus name Anous is ancient Greek for "stupid" or "foolish". The specific name minutus is the Latin for "small".There are seven subspecies:
- A. m. worcesteri – Cavilli Island and Tubbataha Reef
- A. m. minutus Boie, 1844 – northeast Australia and New Guinea to Tuamotu Archipelago
- A. m. marcusi – Marcus and Wake Islands through Micronesia to the Caroline Islands
- A. m. melanogenys Gray, 1846 – Hawaiian Islands to the Kermadec Islands
- A. m. diamesus – Clipperton Island and Cocos Island
- A. m. americanus – islands in the Caribbean Sea
- A. m. atlanticus – tropical islands in the Atlantic
Description
Behaviour
These birds may have become known as "noddies" because of the behaviour of both sexes as they constantly dip their heads during their breeding display. They are very tolerant of humans even to the extent that they can be picked up off the nest. They feed on fish and squid which they gather by flying low over the surface of the sea and picking them up. They may associate with other seabirds in areas where predatory fish are driving small fish to the surface.The nests of these birds consist of a level platform, often created in the branches of trees by a series of dried leaves covered with bird droppings. One egg is laid each season, and nests are re-used in subsequent years. The trees used for this purpose are various but the Pisonia is most often used, and in large trees, there are often several nests. The guano produced by these birds adds large quantities of nutrients to the soil which is of great importance to the plant communities on coral islands.