Loons
Gavia immer
Description - This common loon has a large,
heavy body with a thick and pointed black bill. In the
breeding season the plumage, head and neck are black with
white bands on the neck and white spots on the back; in
the winter the crown, hindneck and upperparts dark grey
and the throat and underparts are white. The call of the
loon, which occurs usually at night and during migration,
is a loud, wailing laugh or a mournful yodel and has been
described as "one of the most striking wilderness sounds,
a strange, sad, mournful, unearthly cry, half laughing,
half wailing".
Distribution
- The loon breeds from Aleutian Islands, Alaska and Northern
Canada, south to New Hampshire, Montana, and California,
USA. Loons nest on forested lakes and rivers and winter
on coastal bays and oceans south to the Gulf Coast. Also
breeds in Iceland.
Biology - Loons are expert divers whose eyes can focus
both in water and in air. They concentrate oxygen in their
leg muscles to sustain them while diving to depths of
up to 200 feet. Nearly solid bones make them heavier than
many other birds.