BOOBY


The 'boobies' are part of the family Sulidae, a group of seabirds closely related to gannets. The true boobies all belong to the genus '''Sula'''.
These are large birds with long pointed wings and long bills. They hunt fish by diving from a height into the sea and pursuing their prey underwater. They have facial air sacs under their skin which cushion the impact with the water.
Boobies are colonial breeders on islands and coasts. They normally lay one or more chalky-blue eggs on the ground or sometimes in a tree nest. Their name is possibly based on the Spanish slang term ''bubi'', meaning "dunce", as these tame birds had a habit of landing on-board sailing ships, where they were easily captured and eaten.
Owing to this, boobies are often mentioned to have been caught and eaten by shipwrecked sailors, notably Captain Bligh of HMAV ''Bounty'' and his loyalists during their famous voyage after being set adrift by Fletcher Christian and his mutineers.

Contents
Systematics and evolution
References
Footnotes
External links

Systematics and evolution


Red-footed Booby, ''Sula sula''

Five of the six extant Sulidae species called "boobies" are in the genus ''Sula'', while the three gannets are usually treated in the genus ''Morus''. Abbott's Booby was formerly included in ''Sula'' but is now placed in a monotypic genus ''Papasula'' which represents an ancient lineage perhaps closer to ''Morus'' (Friesen ''et al.'' 2002). Some authorities consider that all nine species should be considered congeneric, in ''Sula''. However, they are readily told apart by means of osteology, and the distinct lineages of gannets and boobies are known to have existed in such form since at least the Middle Miocene, c.15 mya (Olson 1985).
The fossil record of boobies is not as well documented as that of gannets; possible reasons could be that booby species were less numerous in the late Miocene to Pliocene when gannets had their highest diversity, or that due to the more tropical distribution of boobies, many fossil species have simply not been found yet as most localities are in continental North America or Europe.
'GENUS ''SULA'''

Blue-footed Booby, ''Sula nebouxii''

Peruvian Booby, ''Sula variegata''

Masked Booby, ''Sula dactylatra''


Tasman Booby, ''Sula (dactylatra) tasmani'' - possibly extinct (c.1790?[1])

Nazca Booby, ''Sula granti'' (formerly ''S. dactylatra granti'')

Red-footed Booby, ''Sula sula''

Brown Booby, ''Sula leucogaster''

★ ''Sula willetti'' (Late Miocene of California) - may belong into ''Morus''

★ ''Sula humeralis'' (fossil; Middle Pliocene)

★ ''Sula sulita'' (fossil; Pisco Late Miocene of Peru)

★ ''Sula magna'' (fossil; Pisco Late Miocene/Early Pliocene of Peru)
Placement of ''"Sula" ronzoni'' (Early Oligocene of Ronzon, France) in this genus (and indeed in the Sulidae) is uncertain; it was initially described as a ''Mergus'' sea-duck, but this is incorrect. Later, it was proposed to be related to cormorants and the genus ''Prophalacrocorax'' was erected for it; this is erroneous (Olson 1985).

References



★ 'Friesen', V. L.; Anderson, D. J.; Steeves, T. E.; Jones, H. & Schreiber, E. A. (2002): Molecular Support for Species Status of the Nazca Booby (''Sula granti''). ''Auk'' '119'(3): 820–826. [English with Spanish abstract] DOI: 10.1642/0004-8038(2002)119[0820:MSFSSO]2.0.CO;2 PDF fulltext
Footnotes

1.
This form poses major problems. Initially, it was described as an extinct species, but it seems nowadays that these individuals merely represent the largest birds of the Tasman Sea Masked Booby which was separated as the subspecies ''S. dactylatra fullagari''. As ''tasmani'' had been described first, ''fullagari'' becomes a junior synonym if the extinct and the extant birds are considered to belong to the same taxon, which would thus be named ''S. d. tasmani'' (''fide'' Holdaway & Anderson, 2001). If one assumes that the differences are not merely related to size, the extinct birds - which are certainly not a distinct species as initially believed - would be named ''S. d. tasmani'' (''fide'' van Tets ''et al.'', 1988), and the extant subspecies would retain the name ''fullagari''. There is sufficient material for DNA analyses to settle this question.

External links



★ ARKive - images and movies of the Abbott's booby ''(Papasula abbotti)''

Booby videos on the Internet Bird Collection

Sibling rivalry between Booby chicks Video

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