Photo by Kelly Wohlwend |
Photo by Kelly Wohlwend |
This Northern Flicker affectionately became known as "Mr. Bill." (This Northern Flicker is actually a girl. Notice the lack of red on the face. The Northern Flicker pictured below with a normal beak is a male). Despite the gender, the name stuck but I'll go ahead and refer to her as Mrs. Bill for consistency's sake. I noticed that Mrs. Bill had no trouble getting into our suet feeder. In fact, the elongated bill worked to her advantage. She was able to easily poke her bill through the bars and pluck out large, fatty morsels. Normally, Northern Flickers are foraging for food (mostly small invertebrates) on the ground, so an overly long beak may not cause as big of a problem for a flicker as it may for a Pileated Woodpecker, which relies on drumming holes in dead trees for food. It would be interesting to see how this flicker would manage drilling a hole a tree with such a long, curved beak. Needless to say, I have never seen anything like this in all my years of birding, so I made sure to get some pictures and then went on the internet. It turns out this is rather common and even more common in certain areas of the country (more on this later).
This is called Avian Keratin Disorder. I will summarize a description by audubon.org here (all my sources are listed below). It is a disorder that results in the elongation of keratin in the beak of adult birds and is more common in the top bill than the bottom but can appear in both (Audubon.org 2014). This deformity may be the result of environmental pollutants and can also affect a birds claws and feathers (Audubon.org 2014). Two pollutants listed by Audubon were organochlorines found in the Great Lakes region and selenium, found in California from agricultural runoff (Audubon.org 2014).
Courtesy of the USGS (found in link listed in Resources Cited) |
These two studies are summarized well in a few different places, including the Huffington Post (cited below) and the USGS (cited below). News of this also made it into the Anchorage Daily News (cited below). In my research I didn't see Northern Flickers listed as a commonly affected species. I'm still wondering if I can/should report this siting to Audubon or even the USGS.
Northern Flicker (male) with normal beak |
Resources Cited:
Audubon.org: http://birds.audubon.org/faq/what-would-cause-deformed-beak 4 January 2014.
Hemert, Caroline Van; Handel, Colleen M and O'Hara, Todd M. "Evidence of Accelerated Beak Growth Associated with Avian Keratin Disorder in Black-capped Chickadees (Poecile atrcapillus)." Journal of Wildlife Diseases. 48(3):686-94, July 2012. A full publication of this article can be found at: http://www.jwildlifedis.org/doi/pdf/10.7589/0090-3558-48.3.686
Hemert, Caroline Van and Handel, Colleen M. "Beak Deformities in Northwest Crows: Evidence of Multispecies Epizootic." The Auk. 127(4): 746-751, 2010.
http://alaska.usgs.gov/science/biology/landbirds/beak_deformity/pdfs/Auk_VanHemert_crow_beak_deformities.pdf
Huffington Post: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/11/09/bird-beak-deformities-avian-keratin-disorder-_n_780809.html 4 January 2014.
U.S. Geological Survey. "Deformed Beaks May Signal A Greater Environmental Problem." 8 November 2010. http://www.usgs.gov/newsroom/article.asp?ID=2633&from=rss_home#.UshqXrSUO3o Visited: 4 January 2014.
Anchorage Daily News. "More Deformed Beaks Seen On Birds In Alaska, Northwest." Written by Dan Joling. http://www.adn.com/2010/11/08/1543506/scientists-see-higher-incidence.html Visited 4 January 2014.
I just saw one of these Northern Flickers with Avian Keratin Disorder in my yard here in Raleigh, NC. Got a couple of photos of him in a tree. I wondered what it was. Thanks for this post. I learned someting new today.
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