







| Kingdom | Phylum | Class | Order | Family |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ANIMALIA | CHORDATA | AVES | CHARADRIIFORMES | LARIDAE |
| Scientific Name: | Sterna paradisaea | ||||||
| Species Authority: | Pontoppidan, 1763 | ||||||
Common Name/s:
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| Red List Category & Criteria: | Least Concern ver 3.1 | |||||||||
| Year Assessed: | 2010 | |||||||||
| Assessor/s: | BirdLife International | |||||||||
| Reviewer/s: | Calvert, R., Butchart, S., Bird, J. | |||||||||
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Justification: This species has an extremely large range, and hence does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the range size criterion (Extent of Occurrence <20,000 km2 combined with a declining or fluctuating range size, habitat extent/quality, or population size and a small number of locations or severe fragmentation). Despite the fact that the population trend appears to be decreasing, the decline is not believed to be sufficiently rapid to approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population trend criterion (>30% decline over ten years or three generations). The population size is extremely large, and hence does not approach the thresholds for Vulnerable under the population size criterion (<10,000 mature individuals with a continuing decline estimated to be >10% in ten years or three generations, or with a specified population structure). For these reasons the species is evaluated as Least Concern. |
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| History: |
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| Range Description: | The Arctic Tern has a circumpolar range, breeding in the Arctic and subarctic regions of Europe, Asia and North America as far south as Brittany, France and Massachusetts (USA). It is a transequatorial migrant, and can be found wintering throughout the Southern Ocean to the edge of the Antarctic ice and the southern tips of South America and Africa1. Overall population trends are relatively unknown, though the 2008 breeding season in the north of the United Kingdom was reported to be a failure by the RSPB. |
| Countries: |
Native:
Angola; Antarctica; Argentina; Australia; Austria; Belgium; Benin; Bermuda; Bolivia; Brazil; British Indian Ocean Territory; Cameroon; Canada; Cape Verde; Chile; Colombia; Congo; Costa Rica; Côte d'Ivoire; Cuba; Denmark; Ecuador; Equatorial Guinea; Estonia; Falkland Islands (Malvinas); Faroe Islands; Finland; France; Gabon; Gambia; Germany; Ghana; Greece; Greenland; Guinea; Guinea-Bissau; Iceland; Ireland; Japan; Latvia; Liberia; Lithuania; Mauritania; Mexico; Morocco; Namibia; Netherlands; New Zealand; Nigeria; Norway; Paraguay; Peru; Poland; Portugal; Puerto Rico; Russian Federation; Russian Federation; Russian Federation; Saint Pierre and Miquelon; Sierra Leone; Somalia; South Africa; South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands; Spain; Svalbard and Jan Mayen; Sweden; Togo; United Kingdom; United States
Vagrant:
Algeria; Belarus; Bulgaria; Central African Republic; Congo, The Democratic Republic of the; Croatia; Cyprus; Czech Republic; Egypt; French Southern Territories (the); Gibraltar; Guadeloupe; Hungary; India; Indonesia; Israel; Italy; Jordan; Kuwait; Lesotho; Libyan Arab Jamahiriya; Luxembourg; Marshall Islands; Montenegro; Mozambique; Oman; Panama; Saint Helena; Senegal; Serbia; Slovakia; Sudan; Switzerland; Turkey; Ukraine; United Arab Emirates; Uruguay; Virgin Islands, U.S.
Present - origin uncertain:
Bouvet Island; Guatemala; Heard Island and McDonald Islands
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| Range Map: | Click here to open the map viewer and explore range. |
| Population: | Total regarded as a minimum by Wetlands International (2006). |
| Habitat and Ecology: | Behaviour The species is a very strong migrant and makes exceptional long-distance movements offshore or along western continental coastlines1, 6 between its high Arctic breeding grounds and Antarctic wintering grounds1. It breeds between May and July (although the exact timing varies with temperature and food availability) in solitary pairs or colonies of a few to several hundred pairs (usually 2-25)1, and remains gregarious throughout the year especially when roosting, foraging4 and on passage5. The species generally feeds within 3 km of breeding colonies but may occasionally forage up to 50 km away1. On its wintering grounds in Antarctica it may also forage in association with Antarctic Minke Whale Balaenoptera bonaerensis in the open ocean north of the pack-ice zone5. Habitat Breeding The species breeds along northern coastlines1 and on inshore islands3, 4 as well as inland on tundra and forest-tundra3. It shows a preference for habitats with a vegetation cover of less than 40 %, nesting on sand or shingle beaches, ridges1 and spits3, rocky ground1, 2, 3 and small islands1, 3, 4 in lakes and coastal lagoons1. It may also nest on islets or banks along rivers4, on swampy tundra1, 3 and peatlands with bog hummocks1 and reed-covered flats3, or on inland heaths, rough pastures1, 4, meadows1 and sedge grassland4 not far from water3. The species also forages offshore, in ice-filled coastal bays or over wet tundra1. Non-breeding On passage it largely flies over open ocean4 resting at sea on kelp, logs or flotsam, but may occur inland or along coastlines on beaches, reefs and spits5. During the winter the species is pelagic, foraging at the edges of pack-ice, icebergs and ice-floes near shore (especially in channels between ice-floes)5 and up to 24 km offshore1, 5 often in association with Antarctic Minke Whale Balaenoptera bonaerensis5. It also roosts on ice-floes and icebergs during this season5. Diet Its diet consists predominantly of fish as well as crustaceans (especially planktonic species), molluscs, insects (e.g. caterpillars, Chironomidae) and earthworms1. It will also take berries in the early spring on arrival on its breeding grounds but does not readily switch to other prey items when preferred prey supplies fail1. Breeding site The nest is a shallow scrape1 in sand, shingle or turf2 on beaches, ridges1 and spits3, rocky ground1, 2, 3, small islands1, 3, 4 in lakes, coastal lagoons1 and rivers4, swampy tundra1, 3 and peatlands with bog hummocks1 and reed-covered flats3, or on inland heaths, rough pastures1, 4, meadows1 and sedge grassland4 not far from water3. It will also nest on artificial structures1. Management information Removing feral American mink Neovison vison from a large archipelago with many small islands in the Baltic Sea resulted in an increase in the breeding density of this species in the area8. Gull control measures may also be practised successfully at some sites to reduce predation and displacement, especially when carried out in conjunction with the use of recordings and models to induce recolonistion of nesting terns7. |
| Systems: | Terrestrial; Freshwater; Marine |
| Major Threat(s): | The species is potentially threatened by climate change because it has a geographically bounded distribution: its global distribution is restricted to within c.10o latitude from the polar edge of continent and within which 20-50% of current vegetation type is projected to disappear under doubling of CO2 levels9. |
| Citation: | BirdLife International 2010. Sterna paradisaea. In: IUCN 2011. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2011.2. <www.iucnredlist.org>. Downloaded on 07 February 2012. |
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