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Overview
Boyd's shearwater

Boyd's shearwater

Wikipedia

Boyd's shearwater, also known as the Cape Verde little shearwater, is a small shearwater which breeds in the Cape Verde archipelago of the Atlantic Ocean some 570 km off the coast of West Africa. The epithet commemorates British ornithologist Arnold Boyd.

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Distribution

Region

Eastern Tropical Atlantic (Cabo Verde Archipelago)

Typical Environment

This species breeds on a few rocky islets and rugged coastal slopes within the Cabo Verde archipelago and ranges over surrounding pelagic waters. Away from colonies, it forages over open ocean where upwelling and fronts concentrate prey. Nests are typically in crevices, among boulders, or in shallow burrows on steep, inaccessible terrain. It remains largely near the archipelago year-round, dispersing over adjacent tropical waters outside the breeding season.

Altitude Range

Sea level to 600 m

Climate Zone

Tropical

Characteristics

Size27–30 cm
Wing Span60–70 cm
Male Weight0.2 kg
Female Weight0.19 kg
Life Expectancy20 years

Ease of Keeping

Beginner friendly: 1/5

Useful to know

Boyd's shearwater, also called the Cape Verde little shearwater, is a small, nocturnally active seabird that nests in burrows and rock crevices on remote islets of Cabo Verde. Adults return to colonies under cover of darkness to avoid predators and disturbance. At sea they fly low over waves with swift, fluttering wingbeats interspersed with short glides. Threats include introduced mammals, light pollution disorienting fledglings, and bycatch.

Gallery

Bird photo
Egg of Puffinus boydi(coll.MHNT)

Egg of Puffinus boydi(coll.MHNT)

Behaviour

Temperament

social and active

Flight Pattern

short rapid wingbeats low over the water with brief glides

Social Behavior

A colonial nester that breeds in loose to moderately dense colonies on predator-poor islets. It is strongly nocturnal at colonies, arriving and departing under darkness. Pairs form long-term bonds, lay a single egg, and share incubation and chick-rearing duties.

Migratory Pattern

Partial migrant

Song Description

At night near colonies it gives soft, rolling trills and wailing calls typical of small shearwaters, often exchanged between mates. At sea it is generally quiet.

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