Imperial shag
The imperial shag or imperial cormorant is a black-and-white cormorant native to southern South America, islands of the Subantarctic, and the Antarctic Peninsula, primarily in rocky coastal regions, but locally also at large inland lakes. Some taxonomic authorities, including the International Ornithologists' Union, place it in the genus Leucocarbo, others in the genus Phalacrocorax. It is also known as the blue-eyed shag, blue-eyed cormorant and by many other names, and is one of a larger group of cormorants called blue-eyed shags. The taxonomy is complex, and several types are treated as either subspecies or separate species.
Taxonomy
The taxonomy is complex, and species limits within this group remain unresolved. Some taxonomic authorities, including the International Ornithologists' Union, split the group into the species listed below. Others consider all or part of the group conspecific. The following are part of this group:- Imperial shag, Leucocarbo atriceps, from coastal southern Chile and Argentina.
- * King cormorant/white-bellied shag, Leucocarbo albiventer, from the Falkland Islands, and locally in southern Argentina and Chile.
- Antarctic shag, Leucocarbo bransfieldensis, from the Antarctic Peninsula and the South Shetland Islands.
- South Georgia shag, Leucocarbo georgianus, from the South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands, and South Orkney Islands.
- Heard Island shag, Leucocarbo nivalis, from Heard Island.
- Crozet shag, Leucocarbo melanogenis, from the Crozet and Prince Edward Islands.
- Macquarie shag, Leucocarbo purpurascens, from Macquarie Island.
Description
The imperial shag has a total length of and weighs, with males usually larger than females. It is endowed with glossy black feathers covering most of its body, with a white belly and neck. It possesses a distinctive ring of blue skin around its eyes, an orange-yellow nasal knob, pinkish legs and feet, and an erectile black crest. During the non-breeding season, adults lack the crest, have a duller facial area, and less or no white to the back and wings. It has a serrated bill used for catching fish.The group varies primarily in the amount of white on the cheeks/ear-coverts, wing-coverts and back. Most taxa have white cheeks and ear-coverts, but these are black in albiventer, purpurascens and melanogenis. Chicks are uniform brownish, and immatures are brownish and white, have dull facial skin, and lack the orange-yellow nasal knob and blue eye-ring.