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Overview
Swinhoe's storm petrel

Swinhoe's storm petrel

Wikipedia

Swinhoe's storm petrel or Swinhoe's petrel is a small, all-brown seabird of the storm petrel family Hydrobatidae.

Distribution

Region

Northwest Pacific and northern Indian Ocean

Typical Environment

Breeds on small predator-free islands in the Northwest Pacific around Japan, Korea, northeast China, and the Russian Far East. At sea it frequents open pelagic waters over continental shelf edges and offshore currents. After breeding it disperses widely into the northern Indian Ocean, including the Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal. It is typically far from land except when breeding, concentrating where upwellings and frontal zones concentrate prey.

Altitude Range

Sea level to 500 m

Climate Zone

Temperate

Characteristics

Size18–21 cm
Wing Span43–48 cm
Male Weight0.048 kg
Female Weight0.046 kg
Life Expectancy20 years

Ease of Keeping

Beginner friendly: 1/5

Useful to know

Swinhoe's storm petrel is an all-dark, small oceanic seabird that can be confused with Leach’s storm petrel but lacks the white rump and shows only a faint pale upperwing panel. It breeds in burrows or rock crevices on remote islands and visits colonies only at night to avoid predators. Outside the breeding season it ranges widely across the northern Indian Ocean. It can be attracted to lights on ships and coastal settlements during dark, overcast nights.

Gallery

Bird photo
Bird photo

Behaviour

Temperament

pelagic and elusive; colonial at breeding sites

Flight Pattern

buoyant, bounding flight with quick wingbeats and short glides; capable of dynamic soaring in strong winds

Social Behavior

Breeds colonially in burrows or rock crevices, visiting colonies strictly at night. Pairs are typically monogamous, laying a single egg with shared incubation and chick-rearing. Adults commute between feeding grounds and colonies over long distances.

Migratory Pattern

Seasonal migrant

Song Description

Usually silent at sea. At night in colonies, gives low, chattering trills and purring calls from burrow entrances.

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