The Axis are guarding a hoard of gold in the Tobruk Central Bank. The Allies must steal an Axis Jagdpanther to blow up the bank open, steal the gold bars and drive them to safety in a Truck. Rules of this map: When the tank r
The storm-petrels are
seabirds in the
familyHydrobatidae, part of the order
Procellariiformes. These smallest of seabirds, relatives of
the petrels, feed on planktonic crustaceans and small fish
picked from the surface, typically while hovering. The
flight is fluttering and sometimes bat-like.
Storm-petrels have a
cosmopolitan distribution, being found in all oceans.
They are strictly pelagic, coming to land only when
breeding. In the case of most species, little is known of
their behaviour and distribution at sea, where they can be
hard to find and harder to identify.
Traditionally, two subfamilies are recognized. The
Oceanitinadae are mostly found in southern waters
(though the Wilson's Storm-petrel regularly migrates into
the northern hemisphere); there are 7 species in 5 genera.
The Hydrobatinae are the two genera Hydrobates and
Oceanodroma. They are largely restricted to the
northern hemisphere, although a few can visit or breed a
short distance beyond the equator.
Cytochrome b DNA sequence analysis suggests that the family
is paraphyletic and may be more accurately treated as
distinct families.[1] The same study found that the
storm-petrels are certainly ancestral to the
Procellariiformes. The first split was the subfamily Hydrobatinae, with the Oceanitinadae splitting from the rest
of the order at a later date.
Morphology and flight
Storm-petrels are the smallest of all the
seabirds, ranging in size from 13-26 cm in length. There
are two body shapes in the family; the Oceanitinadae have
short wings, square tails, elongated skulls, and long legs;
the Hydrobatinae have longer wings, forked or wedge-shaped
tails and short legs.
The
plumage of the Oceanitinadae is dark with white
underparts (with the exception of the Wilson's Storm-petrel)
All but two of the Hydrobatinae are mostly dark in colour
with varying amounts of white on the rump. Two species have
different plumage entirely, the Hornby's Storm-petrel which
has white undersides and facial markings, and the
Fork-tailed Storm-petrel which has pale grey plumage.
[2]
Storm-petrels use a variety of techniques to aid
flight. Most species will occasionally feed by surface
pattering, holding and moving their feet on the water's
surface while holding steady above the water. They remain
stationary by hovering with rapid fluttering or by using the
wind to anchor themselves in place.[3]
This method of feeding flight is most commonly used by
Oceanitinadae storm-petrels. The White-faced Storm-petrel
possesses a unique variation on pattering, holding it's
wings motionless and at an angle into the wind it pushes
itself off the water's surface in a succession of bounding
jumps.[4] Storm-petrels also use dynamic soaring and slope
soaring to travel over the ocean surface. Dynamic soaring is
used mostly by the Hydrobatinae, gliding across wave fronts
gaining energy from the vertical wind gradient.[5]
[6] Slope soaring is more straightforward and
favoured by the Oceanitinadae,[3]
the storm-petrel turns to the wind, gaining height, from
where it can then glide back down to the sea.
Breeding
Storm-petrels nest in
colonies on remote islands. Nesting sites are attended
nocturnally in order to avoid predators.[7] Storm-petrels
display high levels of philopatry, returning to their natal
colonies to breed. In one instance a Band-rumped
Storm-petrel was caught as an adult 2m from its natal
burrow.[8] Storm-petrels nest either in burrows dug into
soil or sand, or in small crevices in rocks and scree.
Competition for nesting sites is intense in colonies where
storm-petrels compete with other burrowing petrels, with
shearwaters having been recorded killing storm-petrels in
order to occupy their burrows.[9] Colonies can be extremely
large and dense; 840,000 pairs of White-faced Storm Petrel
nest on South East Island in the Chathams in burrow
densities of between 1.18 - 0.47 burrows/m˛; densities as
high as 8 pairs/m˛ for Maderian Storm-petrels in the
Galapagos and colonies 3.6 million strong for Leach's Storm
Petrel have been recorded.[10]
Storm-petrels are monogamous and form long-term pair
bonds that last a number of years. Studies of paternity
using DNA fingerprinting have shown that unlike many other
monogamous birds infidelity (extra-pair matings) is very
rare.[11] As with the other Procellariiformes, a single egg
is laid by a pair in a breeding season, if the egg fails
then usually no attempt is made to relay (although it
happens rarely). Both sexes incubate in shifts of up to six
days. The egg hatches after 40 or 50 days; the young is
brooded continuously for another 7 days or so before being
left alone in the nest during the day and fed by
regurgitation at night. Meals fed to the chick weigh around
10-20% of the parent's body weight, and consist of both prey
items and stomach oil. Stomach oil is a energy rich (its
calorific value is around 9600 calories per gram) oil
created by partly digested prey in a part of the foregut
known as the proventriculus.[12] By partly converting prey
items into stomach oil storm-petrels can maximise the amount
of energy chicks receive during feed, an advantage for small
seabirds that can only make a single visit to the chick
during a 24 hour period (at night).[13] Chicks fledge after 50 or 70 days, depending on the species.
Relationship with humans
Wilson's Storm Petrels 'walking' on the water in
Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary
The name "petrel" is a diminutive form of "Peter", a
reference to
Saint Peter; it was given to these birds because they
sometimes appear to walk across the water's surface. The
more specific 'storm petrel' or 'stormy petrel' is a
reference to their habit of hiding in the lee of ships
during storms.[14] Early sailors named these birds "Mother
Carey's Chickens" because they were thought to warn of
oncoming storms; this name is based on a corrupted form of
Mater Cara, a name for the Blessed Virgin Mary.
Threats and Conservation
Several species of storm-petrel are threatened by human
activities.[15]
Two, the
Guadalupe Storm-petrel, and the New Zealand Storm-petrel,
are listed as critically endangered. The Guadalupe
Storm-petrel has not been observed since 1906 and most
authorities consider it extinct. The New Zealand
Storm-petrel was also considered extinct for many years but
was sighted again in 2003, even so the population is likely
to be very small. One species (the Ashy Storm-petrel) is listed as endangered due to a 42%
decline over twenty years,[16]
and two other species are also listed as near threatened or
worse. In addition four species are so poorly known that
they are listed as data deficient.
Storm-petrels face the same threats as other
seabirds, in particular they are threatened by
introduced species. The Guadalupe Storm-petrel was
driven to extinction by
feral cats,[17]
and introduced predators such as have also been responsible
for declines in other species. Habitat degradation which
limits nesting opportunities caused by introduced goats and
pigs is also a problem, especially if it increases
competition from more aggressive burrowing petrels.
^
Nunn, G & Stanley, S. (1998) "Body Size Effects and
Rates of Cytochrome b Evolution in Tube-Nosed Seabirds"
Molecular Biology and Evolution15(10):
1360-1371
[1]
Corrigendum
^
Harrison, P. (1983) Seabirds, an identification guide
Houghton Mifflin Company:Boston
ISBN 0-395-33253-2
^ ab
Withers, P.C (1979) "Aerodynamics and Hydrodynamics of
the ‘Hovering’ Flight of Wilson's Storm Petrel"
Journal of Experimental Biology80: 83-91[2]
^
Erickson, J. (1955) "Flight behavior of the
Procellariformes" The Auk72: 415-420
[3]
^
Pennycuick, C. J. (1982). "The flight of petrels and
albatrosses (Procellariiformes), observed in South
Georgia and its vicinity". Philosophical Transactions
of the Royal Society of London B300: 75–106.
^
Brinkley, E. & Humann, A. (2001) "Storm-petrels" in
The Sibley Guide to Bird Life and Behaviour
(Elphick, C., Dunning J. & Sibley D. eds) Alfred
A. Knopf:New York
ISBN 0-679-45123-4
^
Bretagnolle, V. (1990) "Effect of moon on activity of
petrels (Class Aves) from the Selvagen Islands
(Portugal)" Canadian Journal of Zoology68:
1404-1409
^
Harris, M. (1979) "Survival and ages of first breeding
of Galapagos seabirds" Bird Banding50(1):
56-61
[4]
^
Ramos, J.A., Monteiro, L.R., Sola, E., Moniz, Z.,
(1997). "Characteristics and competition of nest
cavities in burrowing Procellariiformes" Condor99: 634–641.[5]
^
West, J. & Nilsson, R. (1994) "Habitat use and burrow
densities of burrow-nesting seabirds on South East
Island, Chatham Islands, New Zealand" Notornis
(Supplement)41 27-37
[6]
^
Mauwk, T., Waite, T. & Parker, P. (1995) "Monogamy in
Leach's Storm Petrel:DNA-fingerprinting evidence" Auk112(2): 473-482
[7]
^
Warham, J. (1976) "The Incidence, Function and
ecological significance of petrel stomach oils."
Proceedings of the New Zealand Ecological Society
24 84-93
[8]
^
Obst, B & Nagy, K (1993) "Stomach Oil and the Energy
Budget of Wilson's Storm-Petrel Nestlings" Condor95: 792-805
[9]
^ Slotterback,
J. W. (2002). Band-rumped Storm-Petrel (Oceanodroma
castro) and Tristram’s Storm-Petrel (Oceanodroma
tristrami). In The Birds of North America,
No. 673 (A. Poole and F. Gill, eds.). The Birds
of North America, Inc., Philadelphia, PA.
^
Sydeman, W., Nurr, N., McLaren, E. & McChesney G. (1998)
Status and Trends of the Ashy Storm-Petrel on Southeast
Farallon Island, California, based upon
capture-recapture analyses" Condor100:
438-447
[10]
^
A contemporary account of the decline of the Guadalupe
Storm-petrel can be found here - Thayer, J. & Bangs, O
(1908) "The Present State of the Ornis of Guadaloupe
Island" Condor10(3): 101-106
[11]