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Zebra Dove

Geopelia striata

Description:

The adult of the nominate subspecies of the Rock Dove is 32–37 cm (12–14½ in) long with a 64–72 cm (25–28 in) wingspan.[12] Weight for Rock Doves ranges from 238 to 380 grams (8.4-13.4 oz).[13] It has a dark bluish-gray head, neck, and chest with glossy yellowish, greenish, and reddish-purple iridescence along its neck and wing feathers. The iris is orange, red or golden with a paler inner ring, and the bare skin round the eye is bluish-grey. The bill is grey-black with a conspicuous off-white cere, and the feet are purplish-red. The adult female is almost identical to the male, but the iridescence on the neck is less intense and more restricted to the rear and sides, while that on the breast is often very obscure.[4] The white lower back of the pure Rock Dove is its best identification character, the two black bars on its pale grey wings are also distinctive. The tail has a black band on the end and the outer web of the tail feathers are margined with white. It is strong and quick on the wing, dashing out from sea caves, flying low over the water, its lighter grey rump showing well from above.[11] Young birds show little lustre and are duller. Eye colour of the pigeon is generally orange but a few pigeons may have white-grey eyes. The eyelids are orange in colour and are encapsulated in a grey-white eye ring. The feet are red to pink.[7] When circling overhead, the white underwing of the bird becomes conspicuous. In its flight, behaviour, and voice, which is more of a dovecot coo than the phrase of the Wood Pigeon, it is a typical pigeon. Although it is a relatively strong flier, it also glides frequently, holding its wings in a very pronounced V shape as it does. Though fields are visited for grain and green food, it is nowhere so plentiful as to be a pest.[14] Pigeons feed on the ground in flocks or individually. They roost together in buildings or on walls or statues. When drinking, most birds take small sips and tilt their heads backwards to swallow the water. Pigeons are able to dip their bills into the water and drink continuously without having to tilt their heads back. When disturbed, a pigeon in a group will take off with a noisy clapping sound.[15] Pigeons, especially homing or carrier breeds, are well known for their ability to find their way home from long distances. Despite these demonstrated abilities, wild Rock Doves are sedentary and rarely leave their local areas.[16]

Habitat:

The Rock Dove has a restricted natural resident range in western and southern Europe, North Africa, and into South Asia. The Rock Dove is often found in pairs in the breeding season but is usually gregarious.[4] The species (including ferals) has a large range, with an estimated global extent of occurrence of 10 million km². It has a large global population, including an estimated 17–28 million individuals in Europe[1] Fossil evidence suggests the Rock Dove originated in southern Asia and skeletal remains unearthed in Israel confirm their existence there for at least three hundred thousand years.[5] However, this species has such a long history with humans that it's impossible to tell exactly where the species' original range was.[17] Its habitat is natural cliffs, usually on coasts. Its domesticated form, the feral pigeon, has been widely introduced elsewhere, and is common, especially in cities, over much of the world. A Rock Pigeon's life span is anywhere from 3–5 years in the wild to 15 years in captivity, though longer-lived specimens have been reported.[15] The species was first introduced to North America in 1606 at Port Royal, Nova Scotia.[11]

1 Species ID Suggestions

Zebra Dove
Geopelia striata Zebra Dove


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8 Comments

Hi Nopayahnah and others. As I stated, the habitat field is for stating the habitat where you actually saw the spotting. This is so that we can track any changes of habitat which may occur for all kinds of reasons.
The reference links field can be used to add links to the site(s) which contain normal habitat and other information rather than copying information from those sites onto the description and notes fields. The description field can be used for describing something which you cannot identify down to a species because your photographs are not good enough, for example, describing the actions of a bird or other animal, which may help to ID it.
We are hoping to add an updated FAQs page in the future which will explain things in more detail. We have been working on this for several weeks. Unfortunately, at the moment the more important issues which keep the site going are taking priority.

Maria dB
Maria dB 12 years ago

Hi Malcolm, I have been under the same impression as BioAlex: that the habitat section is for the scientific information on where it is distributed and the type of habitat where it is usually found and that the notes are for stating where you actually saw it.

BioAlex
BioAlex 12 years ago

Did you see my post to all of you on Facebook (check the most recent post on my wall)? You have until tomorrow night 23:59:59 to fix any and all of your spottings for the extra credit. Make sure that your IDs are correct, you have your links to your sources, and you respond to any commenters. Good luck. :)

Khowfang Wong
Khowfang Wong 12 years ago

Thx for information Xiaoxuan and sorry for mistake

Sorry Alex for my mistake. So, this picture is not include in my extra credit, right TT^TT????

BioAlex
BioAlex 12 years ago

@Malcom Wilton-Jones

My apologies. I have been telling my students to put official habitat information in the habitat section, and then their own details of where they found it in the "Notes" section (which Khowfang has not done). I was unaware that this is not the correct way to report spottings.

I'm afraid you will find a lot of spottings in this mission with their information listed like that. My apologies. I will ask my students to fix their information.

Hi Khowfang Wong, now that you have been given the correct ID for this bird, can you please go into the edit mode and correct the details. Also, can you please state in the habitat field the habitat where you actually saw it, not where the textbooks say it should be.

XXD17
XXD17 12 years ago

It's a zebra dove

Ava T-B
Ava T-B 12 years ago

This isn't a rock dove (Columba livia). I'm afraid I don't know what it IS, but I know what it isn't.

Khowfang Wong
Spotted by
Khowfang Wong

นครราชสีมา, Thailand

Spotted on Mar 13, 2012
Submitted on Mar 13, 2012

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