Royal tern

Species of bird
title: "Royal tern" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["thalasseus", "birds-described-in-1783", "birds-of-south-america", "birds-of-the-caribbean", "birds-of-the-dominican-republic", "birds-of-mexico", "native-birds-of-the-eastern-united-states", "native-birds-of-the-southeastern-united-states", "taxa-named-by-pieter-boddaert"] description: "Species of bird" topic_path: "geography/mexico" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_tern" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0
::summary Species of bird ::
| status = LC | status_system = IUCN3.1 | status_ref = | image = Royal Tern - Thalasseus maximus (33285813120).jpg | image_caption = Breeding plumage, Belize | image2 = RoyalTern.jpg | image2_caption = Winter plumage, Florida | genus = Thalasseus | species = maximus | authority = (Boddaert, 1783) | synonyms = Sterna maxima | range_map = Thalasseus maximus map 2.svg | range_map_caption =Orange: breeding summer visitor Purple: breeding resident Blue: non-breeding winter visitor
The royal tern (Thalasseus maximus) is a tern in the family Laridae. The species is endemic to the Americas, though vagrants have been identified in Europe.
Taxonomy
The royal tern was described by the French polymath Georges-Louis Leclerc, Comte de Buffon in 1781 in his Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux from a specimen collected in Cayenne, French Guiana. The bird was also illustrated in a hand-colored plate engraved by François-Nicolas Martinet in the Planches Enluminées D'Histoire Naturelle which was produced under the supervision of Edme-Louis Daubenton to accompany Buffon's text. Neither the plate caption nor Buffon's description included a scientific name but in 1783 the Dutch naturalist Pieter Boddaert coined the binomial name Sterna maxima in his catalogue of the Planches Enluminées. The royal tern is now placed in the genus Thalasseus that was erected by the German zoologist Friedrich Boie in 1822.
The generic name is derived from the Ancient Greek θάλασσα (thálassa) meaning "sea". The specific epithet maximus is Latin for "greatest".
The royal tern belongs to the class Aves and the order Charadriiformes. Charadriiformes includes seabirds and shorebirds of small to medium-large size. Within Charadriiformes, it is placed in the family Laridae, subfamily Sterninae, because of its white plumage, a black cap on its head, long bill, webbed feet, and bodies that are more streamlined than those of gulls.
The taxonomy of the royal tern has been debated, whether the correct scientific name was Thalasseus maximus or Sterna maxima. It was originally placed in the genus Sterna; however, a 2005 study found that the genus Thalasseus is genetically distinct from Sterna; thus it is presently classified as Thalasseus maximus, which places it with seven other crested terns.
The West African crested tern (Thalasseus albididorsalis) was formerly considered to be a subspecies of royal tern. It was elevated to species status in January 2020, after genetic data showed that West African crested tern is more closely related to lesser crested tern than it is to royal tern.
Description
This is a large tern, second only to the Caspian tern among terns in the Americas, but is unlikely to be confused with this "carrot-billed" giant, which has extensive dark underwing patches. Adults have an average wingspan of 130 cm for both sexes, with a range from 125 –. Its bill-to-tail length ranges from 45 – and the weight is anywhere from 350 –.
The royal tern has a stout orange-red bill, pale silvery-gray upperparts, and white underparts. Its legs are black. The entire crown is black with a shaggy, erectable crest on the nape in the spring during courtship and the start of the breeding season. From early summer into late winter, the black becomes first patchy and then fully white on the forehead and upper crown, retaining black only on the nape. Compared to elegant tern, its molt out of breeding plumage is about two months earlier (June, versus August, for northern populations), and more extensively white. Juvenile royal terns are similar to non-breeding adults, differing in the juveniles having darker gray to blackish marks on the wings, and a yellower bill.
The calls of the royal tern are usually short, clear shrills. Some of the shrills sound like kree or tsirr; it also has a more plover-like whistle that is longer, rolling, and more melodious.
Distribution and habitat
The royal tern is found on both coasts of the Americas. In the northeast, during the breeding season (April to July) it is primarily found from Texas to Virginia, with scattered breeding records as far north as Long Island, New York, and south to French Guiana, and on several Caribbean islands. It also breeds in the southeast from southeastern Brazil south to Chubut Province in Argentina. The wintering range in the east is from North Carolina south to Panama and the Guianas and throughout the Caribbean. The western population nests from California to Mexico and winters from California south to Peru. Argentinian breeders are resident or disperse into Brazil.
Behavior
Feeding
::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/30/Terns_feeding_fledgling.png" caption="A Royal Tern chick being fed by its parents."] ::
The royal tern typically feeds in small secluded bodies of water such as estuaries, mangroves, and lagoons. Also, but less frequently, the royal tern will hunt for fish in open water, typically within about 100 m of the shore. The royal tern feeds in salt water and on very rare occasions in fresh water. When feeding they fly long distances from the colony to forage. The royal tern feeds by diving into the water from heights near 9 m. They usually feed alone or in groups of two or three but on occasion, they feed in large groups when hunting large schools of fish.
The royal tern usually feeds on small fish such as anchovies, weakfish, and croakers. Fish are their main source of food but they also eat insects, shrimp,crabs, and hatchling sea turtles. The royal tern feeds on small crabs, such as young blue crabs that swim near the surface of the water. When feeding on small crabs the royal tern does not use its normal plunge-dive technique, but instead uses short shallow dives so that they are concealed from their prey. The royal tern also uses this technique when hunting flying fish.
Breeding
The royal tern nests on island beaches or isolated beaches with limited predators. It lays one or two eggs, usually in a scrape, an area on the ground where a tern has made a small hole to lay its eggs. In some cases, tern eggs are laid directly on the ground, not in a scrape. The eggs incubate from 25 to 30 days; after the eggs hatch the chicks remain in the scrape for about a week. About two weeks after hatching the chicks gather into groups called a crèche. When the chicks are in the crèche, they are primarily fed by their parents who recognize their offspring by their voice and looks. While the chicks are in the crèche, they usually roam freely around the colony. In a large colony, there can be thousands of chicks in the crèche. When the chicks are a month old they fledge or start to fly; after fledging, the young remain dependent on their parents for food and protection until they are 5–8 months old. Royal terns mature around the age of 4 years, after which they build their own nests and reproduce.
Threats
The royal tern has few predators when it is mature, but before the chicks hatch or while they are chicks the tern is threatened by humans, other animals, and the tides. Humans threaten terns by fishing and by disrupting the tern nesting sites. Fishing nets can catch a tern while it is diving, making it unable to feed or it may cause it to drown if it is caught underwater. Animals such as foxes, raccoons, and large gulls prey on tern chicks and tern eggs.
Tern nesting sites can also be affected by the tides; if a tern colony has nested too close to the high tide mark, a spring tide can flood the nesting site and kill the chicks and make unhatched eggs infertile.
Conservation
The IUCN has rated the royal tern as of Least Concern.
File:Core Banks - Royal Tern & Cabot's Tern - 03.jpg|Adult royal tern and Cabot's tern (smaller bird, right) in flight at Core Banks, North Carolina. File:Thalasseus maximus-wings.jpg|All white underparts Rodanthe, North Carolina Image:Royal Tern, Morro Bay, California (2233232061).jpg|In flight at Morro Bay, California Image:Royal terns in Tárcoles River 01.jpg|Group of royal terns in Tárcoles River, Costa Rica File:Thalasseus maximus MWNH 0387.JPG|Eggs, collection Museum Wiesbaden
References
References
- BirdLife International. (2018). "''Thalasseus maximus''".
- Buckley, P. A. and F. G. Buckley (2020). Royal Tern (Thalasseus maximus), version 1.0. In Birds of the World (S. M. Billerman, Editor). Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, NY, USA. https://doi.org/10.2173/bow.royter1.01 Retrieved 17 April 2021
- Buffon, Georges-Louis Leclerc de. (1781). "Histoire Naturelle des Oiseaux". De L'Imprimerie Royale.
- (1765–1783). "Planches Enluminées D'Histoire Naturelle". De L'Imprimerie Royale.
- Boddaert, Pieter. (1783). "Table des planches enluminéez d'histoire naturelle de M. D'Aubenton: avec les denominations de M.M. de Buffon, Brisson, Edwards, Linnaeus et Latham, precedé d'une notice des principaux ouvrages zoologiques enluminés".
- Boie, Friedrich. (1822). "Generalübersicht". Isis von Oken.
- (2019). "Noddies, gulls, terns, auks". International Ornithologists' Union.
- Jobling, James A.. (2010). "The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names". Christopher Helm.
- (January 2020). "IOC World Bird List (v 10.1)".
- (2017-06-01). "When morphology is not reflected by molecular phylogeny: the case of three 'orange-billed terns' Thalasseus maximus, Thalasseus bergii and Thalasseus bengalensis (Charadriiformes: Laridae)". Biological Journal of the Linnean Society.
- (1992). "Handbook of the Birds of the World: Hoatzin to auks". Lynx edicions.
- Sibley, David Allen. (2014-03-11). "The Sibley Guide to Birds, Second Edition". National Geographic Books.
- (2020). "All the birds of the world". Lynx Edicions.
- (2005). "A phylogenetic framework for the terns (Sternini) inferred from mtDNA sequences: implications for taxonomy and plumage evolution". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution.
- (8 June 2011). "Royal tern (Sterna maxima)". Planet of Birds.
- {{Cite AllAboutBirds. Royal Tern
- (1951). "Audubon Water Bird Guide". Doubleday & Company, Inc..
- Clay, Roger. (October 2006). "Royal tern". Alabama Department of Conservation and Natural Resources.
- (1 June 2000). "Diet of royal (Thalasseus Maximus) and sandwich (T. Sandvicensis) terns during the Austral winter in the Buenos Aires Province, Argentina". Ornitologia Neotropical.
- (3 April 2008). "The breeding ecology of royal terns Stena (Thalasseus) Maxima Maxima". Ibis.
- (2007). "Population status of royal and cayenne terns breeding in Argentina and Brazil". Waterbirds.
- (Spring 2001). "Ground-Nesting Waterbirds and Mammalian Carnivores in the Virginia Barrier Island Region: Running out of Options". Journal of Coastal Research.
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