A custom-designed aviary at the San Diego Zoo
Safari Park is currently buzzing with activity, during the hatching season for
white-fronted bee-eater birds. On Tuesday (May 17, 2016), keepers conducted a
health check on a 22-day old chick, the 16th hatched this season and the 105th
chick born since the Park began breeding this species.
© Jenny Mehlow |
The health check for the bee-eater chick consisted
of putting an identification band on the bird’s leg, weighing the chick (43
grams) and taking a non-flight feather to send to a lab, which will conduct DNA
testing to determine whether the chick is male or female. White fronted
bee-eaters are monomorphic, which means males and females look the same.
These unique birds, while not listed as endangered
by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), are rarely found
in zoos. The Safari Park is home to the only breeding program for this species
in North America, which began in 1993.
The colony is fed a diet of mealworms, waxworms and
crickets, and there are two beehives in the aviary — for supplemental feeding
and to encourage their natural behaviors of “hawking,” when the bird captures a
bee in flight. The bee-eater will take the bee to a branch and rub off the
stinger before consuming it whole. The bee-eater is also able to slow its
flight and hover near flying insects to catch them.
These insect-eating birds are found in Africa,
south of the equator, and have a nesting technique that is not typical for
birds: they build tunnels in earthen banks on hillsides, where they lay their
eggs. At the Safari Park, animal care staff have simulated hillsides and
burrowing tunnels leading to nest boxes, so staff members can monitor the eggs
and hatchlings. This species has one of the most complex social systems of
birds. There are family groups, known as clans, within the larger colony and
younger, non-breeding birds called helpers, which assist in caring for
hatchlings. This system helps increase the overall survival rate of this
species.
The white-fronted bee-eater is a colorful bird with
green upper parts, reddish brown under parts, a black mask on its face, a
bright red throat and a white forehead.
Nick Mertens
19 mei 2016
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