Rock dove
The rock dove, also known as the common pigeon or "rock pigeon", is a member of the bird family Columbidae. In common usage, it is often simply referred to as the "pigeon", although the rock dove is the wild form of the bird; the pigeons familiar to most people are the domesticated forms of the wild rock dove.
Wild rock doves are uniformly pale grey with two black bars on each wing, with few differences being seen between males and females; i.e. they are not strongly sexually dimorphic. The domestic pigeon, often, but invalidly, called "Columba livia domestica", which includes about 1,000 different breeds, is descended from this species. Escaped domestic pigeons are the origin of feral pigeons around the world. Both forms can vary widely in the colour and pattern of their plumage unlike their wild ancestor, being red, brown, checkered, uniformly coloured, or pied.
Habitats include various open and semi-open environments where they are able to forage on the ground. Cliffs and rock ledges are used for roosting and breeding in the wild. Originating in Southern Europe, North Africa, and Western Asia, when including their domestic and feral descendants, they are an example of a least-concern species per IUCN among birds, being abundant with an estimated population of 17 to 28 million wild and feral birds in Europe alone and up to 120 million worldwide.
Taxonomy and systematics
The official standard English name is rock dove, as given by the International Ornithological Congress.The rock dove was formally described in 1789 by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin in his revised and expanded edition of Systema Naturae written by Carl Linnaeus. He placed it with all the other doves and pigeons in the genus Columba and coined the binomial name Columba livia. The genus name Columba is the Latin word meaning "pigeon, dove", whose older etymology comes from the Ancient Greek κόλυμβος, "a diver", hence κολυμβάω, "dive, plunge headlong, swim". Aristophanes and others use the word κολυμβίς, "diver", for the name of the bird, because of its swimming motion in the air. The specific epithet livia is a Medieval Latin variant of livida, "livid, bluish-grey"; this was Theodorus Gaza's translation of Greek péleia, "dove", itself thought to be derived from pellós, "dark-coloured".
No original material was designated by Gmelin in his description of the species, and consequently a neotype specimen, from Fair Isle in Scotland, has been designated to define the species and its nominate subspecies C. l. livia.
Its closest relative in the genus Columba is the hill pigeon, followed by the snow, speckled, and white-collared pigeons. Pigeon chicks are called "squabs". Note that members of the pigeon genus Petrophassa and the speckled pigeon, also have the common name "rock pigeon".
Subspecies
Nine subspecies are recognised:- C. l. livia Gmelin, JF, 1789 – west, central Europe, north Africa to central Asia
- C. l. gymnocycla Gray, GR, 1856 – Mauritania and Senegal to south Mali and Ghana
- C. l. targia Geyr von Schweppenburg, 1916 – north Mali and south Algeria to central Sudan
- C. l. schimperi Bonaparte, 1854 – east Egypt, south Sudan and Eritrea
- C. l. dakhlae Meinertzhagen, R, 1928 – west Egypt
- C. l. palaestinae Zedlitz, 1912 – Sinai Peninsula to Syria, to west and south Arabian Peninsula
- C. l. gaddi Zarudny & Loudon, 1906 – east Turkey to Uzbekistan, to west and north Afghanistan
- C. l. neglecta Hume, 1873 – west Pakistan and east Afghanistan to the Himalayas
- C. l. intermedia Strickland, 1844 – south India and Sri Lanka
Description
The adult of the nominate subspecies of the rock dove is long with a wingspan. Weight for wild or feral rock doves ranges from, though overfed domestic and semi-domestic individuals can exceed normal weights. For standard measurements, the wing chord is typically around, the tail is, the bill is around, and the tarsus is.
This species has dark bluish-grey head, neck, and chest feathers with glossy greenish to reddish-purple iridescence along its neck feathers. The white lower back of the pure rock dove is its best identification characteristic; the two black bars on its pale grey wings are also distinctive. The tail has a black band on the end, and the outer web of the tail feathers are margined with white. The iris is red-brown. The eyelids are grey with a very narrow bluish-grey to grey-white eye ring. The bill is grey-black with a small off-white cere. The feet are red to pink.
The adult female is almost identical in outward appearance to the male, but the iridescence on her neck is less intense and more restricted to the rear and sides, whereas that on the breast is often very obscure. Young females show little lustre and are duller.
When circling overhead, the white underwing of the bird becomes conspicuous. In its flight, behaviour, and voice, which is more of a dovecot coo than the phrase of the wood pigeon, it is a typical Columba pigeon. Although it is a strong flier, it also glides frequently, holding its wings in a very pronounced V shape as it does.
The various subspecies are similar to the nominate, but can be differentiated:
- C. l. livia, the nominate subspecies, has mid-grey mantle plumage, and a relatively short tail.
- C. l. gymnocycla is smaller and very much darker than the nominate. It is almost blackish on the head, rump and underparts with a white back and the iridescence of the nape extending onto the head.
- C. l. targia is slightly smaller than the nominate, with similar plumage, but the back is concolorous with the mantle instead of white.
- C. l. schimperi closely resembles C. l. targia, but has a distinctly paler mantle.
- C. l. dakhlae is smaller and much paler than the nominate.
- C. l. palaestinae is slightly larger than C. l. schimperi and has darker plumage.
- C. l. gaddi is larger and paler than C. l. palaestinae, with which it intergrades in the west.
- C. l. neglecta it is similar to the nominate in size but darker, with a stronger and more extensive iridescent sheen on the neck. It intergrades with C. l. gaddi in the south.
- C. l. intermedia is similar to C. l. neglecta but darker, with a less contrasting back.
Pigeons feathers have two types of melanin, eumelanin and pheomelanin. A study of melanin in the feathers of both wild rock and domestic pigeons, of different colour types and known genetic background, measured the concentration, distribution and proportions of eumelanin and pheomelanin and found that gene mutations affecting the distribution, amounts and proportions of pigments accounted for the greater variation of colour in domesticated birds than in their wild relations. Eumelanin generally causes grey or black colours, while pheomelanin results in a reddish-brown colour. Other shades of brown may be produced through different combinations and concentrations of the two colours. Darker birds may be better able to store trace metals in their feathers due to their higher concentrations of melanin, which may help mitigate the negative effects of the metals, the concentrations of which are typically higher in urban areas.
Vocalisations
The call is a soft, slightly wavering, coo "crruoo-u", similar to feral pigeons. Variations include an alarm call, a nest call, and noises made by juveniles. When displaying, songs are partly sexual, partly threatening. They are accompanied by an inflated throat, tail fanning, strutting, and bowing. The alarm call, given at sight of predators, is a grunt-like oorhh.Osmoregulation
Distribution and habitat
The natural distribution of the rock dove is restricted to a resident range in western and southern Europe, North Africa, and extending into South Asia. They were introduced into most of the rest of the world aboard European ships from 1603 onwards. When including feral birds, the species has a very large range, with an estimated global extent of occurrence of. It has a large global population, including an estimated 17 to 28 million individuals in Europe. Fossil evidence suggests the rock dove originated in southern Asia, and skeletal remains, unearthed in Israel, confirm its existence there for at least 300,000 years. However, this species has such a long history with humans that it is impossible to identify its original range exactly.Wild rock doves reside in rock formations and cliff faces, settling in crevices to nest. Wild nesting sites include caves, canyons, and sea cliffs. They will even live in the Sahara so long as an area has rocks, water, and some plant matter. They prefer to avoid dense vegetation.