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Cygnus olor

Cygnus olor (*)

Cladus: Eukaryota
Supergroup: Opisthokonta
Regnum: Animalia
Subregnum: Eumetazoa
Cladus: Bilateria
Cladus: Nephrozoa
Cladus: Deuterostomia
Phylum: Chordata
Subphylum: Vertebrata
Infraphylum: Gnathostomata
Superclassis: Tetrapoda
Classis: Aves
Subclassis: Carinatae
Infraclassis: Neornithes
Parvclassis: Neognathae
Ordo: Anseriformes
Familia: Anatidae
Subfamilia: Anserinae
Genus: Cygnus
Species: Cygnus olor

Name

Cygnus olor Gmelin, 1789

References

* Cygnus olor Report on ITIS

Vernacular names
Internationalization
Česky: Labuť velká
Ελληνικά : Κύκνος (Βουβός)
English: Mute Swan
Español: Cisne común
Français: Cygne muet, Cygne tuberculé
Hrvatski: Grbavi labud
Magyar: Bütykös hattyú
日本語: コブハクチョウ
한국어: 혹고니
Nederlands: Knobbelzwaan
Русский: Лебедь-шипун
Slovenščina: Labod grbec
Svenska: Knölsvan

The Mute Swan (Cygnus olor) is a species of swan, and thus a member of the duck, goose and swan family Anatidae. It is native to much of Europe and Asia, and (as a rare winter visitor) the far north of Africa. It is also an introduced species in North America, Australasia and southern Africa. The name 'mute' derives from it being less vocal than other swan species.[1][2][3] Measuring 125 to 170 centimetres in length, this large swan is wholly white in plumage with an orange bill bordered with black. It is recognisable by its pronounced knob atop the bill.

Taxonomy

The Mute Swan was first formally described by the German naturalist Johann Friedrich Gmelin as Anas olor in 1789, and was transferred by Johann Matthäus Bechstein to the new genus Cygnus in 1803. It is the type species of the genus Cygnus.[4] Both cygnus and olor mean "swan" in Latin; cygnus is related to the Greek kyknos.[5][6] The synonym Sthenelides olor has occasionally been used in the past.

Despite its Eurasian origin, its closest relatives are the Black Swan of Australia and the Black-necked Swan of South America, not the other Northern Hemisphere swans.[1] The species is monotypic with no living subspecies.[1][3]

Evolution

Mute swan subfossils, 6,000 years old, are found in post-glacial peat beds of East Anglia, Great Britain.[7] They have also been recorded from Ireland east to Portugal and Italy,[8] and from France, 13,000 BP (Desbrosse and Mourer-Chauvire 1972-1973). The paleosubspecies Cygnus olor bergmanni, which differed only in size from the living bird, is known from fossils found in Azerbaijan.

Fossils of swan ancestors more distantly allied to the Mute Swan have been found in four US states: California, Arizona, Idaho and Oregon.[9] The timeline runs from the Miocene to the late Pleistocene, or 10,000 BP. The latest find was in Anza Borrego Desert, a national park in California.[9] Fossils from the Pleistocene include Cygnus paloregonus from Fossil Lake, Oregon, Froman's Ferry, Idaho, and Arizona, referred to by Howard in Waterfowl of the World pp. 262–265 as "probably the mute type swan".

The largest Mute Swans are found in the Caspian Sea area, on migration,.[10]

Description
Mute Swan


Adults of this large swan range from 125 to 170 centimetres (49 to 67 in) long with a 200 to 240 centimetres (79 to 94 in) wingspan. They may stand over 120 centimetres (47 in) tall on land. Males are larger than females and have a larger knob on their bill.

The Mute Swan is one of the heaviest flying birds, with males (known as cobs) averaging about 12 kilograms (26 lb) and the slightly smaller females (known as pens) weighing about 9 kilograms (20 lb). An unusually big Polish cob weighed almost 23 kilograms (51 lb), surpassing the longer-bodied Trumpeter Swan to make it the heaviest waterfowl ever recorded. Its size, orange-reddish bill and white plumage make this swan almost unmistakable at close quarters. Compared to the other Northern white swans, the Mute Swan can easily be distinguished by its curved neck and orange, black-knobbed bill. Unlike most other Northern swan species (who usually inhabit only pristine wetlands without regular human interference), the Mute Swan has, in some parts of the world, become habituated and fearless towards humans. Such swans are often seen at close range in urban areas with bodies of water.

Young birds, called cygnets, are not the bright white of mature adults, and their bill is dull greyish-black, not orange, for the first year. The down may range from pure white to grey to buff, with grey/buff the most common. The white cygnets have a leucistic gene. All Mute Swans are white at maturity, though the feathers (particularly on the head and neck) are often stained orange-brown by iron and tannins in the water.

The morph immutabilis ("Polish Swan") has pinkish (not dark grey) legs and dull white cygnets; as with white domestic geese, it is only found in populations with a history of domestication.[11]

Behaviour


Mute Swans nest on large mounds that they build with waterside vegetation in shallow water on islands in the middle or at the very edge of a lake. They are monogamous and often reuse the same nest each year, restoring or rebuilding it as needed. Male and female swans share the care of the nest, and once the cygnets are fledged it is not uncommon to see whole families looking for food. They feed on a wide range of vegetation, both submerged aquatic plants which they reach with their long necks, and by grazing on land. The food commonly includes agricultural crop plants such as oilseed rape and wheat, and feeding flocks in the winter may cause significant crop damage, often as much through trampling with their large webbed feet, as through direct consumption.[12] Unlike Black Swans, Mute Swans are usually strongly territorial with just a single pair on smaller lakes, though in a few locations where a large area of sutiable feeding habitat is found they can be colonial. The largest colonies have over 100 pairs, such as at the colony at Abbotsbury Swannery in southern England, and at the southern tip of Öland Island, Ottenby Preserve, in the coastal waters of the Baltic Sea, and can have nests spaced as little as 2 metres (7 ft) apart.[11][13] Non-mated juveniles up to 3–4 years old also commonly form larger flocks, which can total several hundred birds, often at regular traditional sites.[14] A notable flock of non-breeding birds is found on the River Tweed estuary at Berwick-upon-Tweed in northeastern England, with a maximum count of 787 birds.[15] Once the adults are mated they seek out their own territories and often live close to ducks and gulls, which may take advantage of the swan's ability to reach deep water weeds, which tend to spread out on the water surface.

The Mute Swan is less vocal than the noisy Whooper and Bewick's Swans; the most familiar sound associated with Mute Swan is the vibrant throbbing of the wings in flight. This sound is unique to the species, and can be heard from a range of 1 to 2 kilometres (0.6 to 1 mi), indicating its value as a contact sound between birds in flight.[11] They do however make a variety of grunting, hoarse whistling, and snorting noises, especially in communicating with their cygnets, and usually hiss at predators trying to enter their territory.
Nesting in early Spring, Aabach (Greifensee) in Wetzikon, Switzerland

Although this bird can be tame, especially to those who feed it daily, it is aggressive in defence of its nest, and its size and impressive hissing make it a formidable adversary for animals as large as a fox. Large waterfowl, such as Canada Geese may be driven off, and there have been many reports of Mute Swans attacking people who enter their territory. The cob is also responsible for defending the cygnets while on the water, and will sometimes attack small watercraft, such as canoes, that it feels are a threat to its young. The cob will also try and chase the predator out of his family territory, and will keep animals such as foxes and birds at bay.

The familiar pose with neck curved back and wings half raised, known as busking, is a threat display, mainly shown by males but also females to a small extent. Black Swans and Whooper Swans are less aggressive and are not as defensive against predators. Trumpeter Swans will sometimes leave their nests if threatened. Mute Swans will attack land animals in defense of their families, during the period before fledging of their offspring[vague] (which, at six months, is longer than that of most other birds).

Distribution and habitat


The Mute Swan is found naturally mainly in temperate areas of Europe across western Asia, as far east as the Russian Maritimes, near Sidemi.[16] Gmelin (1789) and John Latham (1824)[10] reported Mute Swans present in Kamchatka in the 18th century.

It is partially migratory throughout northern latitudes in Europe and Asia, as far south as north Africa and the Mediterranean. It is known and recorded to have nested in Iceland and is a vagrant to that area, as well as to Bermuda, according to the U.N. Environmental Programme chart of international status chart of bird species, which places it in 70 countries, breeding in 49 countries, and vagrant in 16 countries. While most of the current population in Japan is introduced, Mute Swans are depicted on scrolls more than a thousand years old, and wild birds from the mainland Asian population still occur rarely in winter. Natural migrants to Japan usually occur along with Whooper and sometimes Bewick's Swans.

The Mute Swan is protected in most of its range, but this has not prevented illegal hunting and poaching. It is often kept in captivity outside its natural range, as a decoration for parks and ponds, and escapes have happened. The descendants of such birds have become naturalised in the eastern United States and Great Lakes, much as the Canada Goose has done in Europe.

World population


Native populations

The total native population of Mute Swans is about 500,000 birds at the end of the breeding season (adults plus young), of which 350,000 are in the former Soviet Union.[1] The largest single breeding concentration is 11,000 pairs in the Volga Delta.[2]

The population in the United Kingdom is about 22,000 birds, as of the 2006-2007 winter,[17] a slight decline from the peak of about 26,000-27,000 birds in 1990.[2] This includes about 5,300 breeding pairs, the remainder being immatures.[18] Other significant populations in Europe include 6,800-8,300 breeding pairs in Germany, 4,500 pairs in Denmark, 4,000-4,200 pairs in Poland, 3,000-4,000 pairs in Netherlands, about 2,500 pairs in Ireland, and 1,200-1,700 pairs in Ukraine.[2]

Populations in western Europe were largely exterminated by hunting pressure in the 13th-19th centuries, with the exception of semi-domesticated birds maintained as poultry by large landowners. Better protection in the late 19th and early 20th centuries allowed birds to return to most or all of their former range.[19][20] More recently in the period from about 1960 up to the early 1980s, numbers declined significantly again in many areas, primarily due to lead poisoning from birds swallowing discarded fishing sinkers made from lead. After lead weights were replaced by other less toxic alternatives, Mute Swan numbers increased again rapidly.[2]

Introduced populations

Mute Swans have been introduced into North American and the increase in numbers has deemed it to be an invasive species. Other introduced populations are small, with around 200 in Japan, less than 200 in New Zealand and Australia, and about 120 in South Africa.[1]

The status of the Mute Swan as an introduced species in North America is disputed by the pressure group "Save The Mute Swans", who produced a variety of claims to support their stance that Mute Swans are native in the region and therefore deserving of protection.[21] These claims are specifically rejected by the US Department of the Interior as specious.[22]

New Zealand

The Mute Swan had absolute protection in New Zealand under the Wildlife Act 1953 but this was changed in June 2010 to a lower level of protection. It still has protection but is now able to be killed or held in captivity at the discretion of the Minister of Conservation.[23]

United States

The Mute Swan was introduced to the United States in the late 19th century, primarily for its ornamental value. Recently, it has been widely viewed as an invasive species because of its rapidly increasing numbers and impacts on other waterfowl and native ecosystems. For example, a study of population sizes in the lower Great Lakes from 1971 to 2000 found that Mute Swan numbers were increasing at an average rate of at least 10% per year, doubling the population every seven to eight years.[24] Several studies have concluded that Mute Swans severely reduce densities of submerged vegetation where they occur.[25]

In 2003, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service proposed to "minimize environmental damages attributed to mute swans" by reducing their numbers in the Atlantic Flyway to pre-1986 levels, a 67% reduction at the time. According to the 2003 Federal Register[26] the proposal was supported by all thirteen state wildlife agencies which submitted comments as well as by 43 bird conservation, wildlife conservation and wildlife management organisations. Ten animal rights organisations and the vast majority of comments from individuals were opposed. At this time Mute Swans were protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act due to a court order, but in 2005 the United States Department of the Interior officially declared them a non-native, unprotected species.[22] Mute Swans are protected in some areas of the U.S. by local laws, as for example in Connecticut.[27]

Cultural references

* There is rich iconic and literary evidence for Celtic bird-goddesses who took the form of swans. Similarly, swans are highly revered in Hinduism (see the culture section of swan).
* The Irish folk tale of the Children of Lir had the three children of King Lir magically transformed into swans for 900 years until, for the spell to be ended, they were blessed by a monk, Christianity having been introduced to Ireland by Saint Patrick during their enchantment.
* The phrase swan song refers to this swan and to the legend that it is utterly silent until the last moment of its life, and then sings one achingly beautiful song just before dying.
* Socrates' last words before being put to death in 399 BC: "You think I cannot see as far ahead as a swan. You know that when swans feel the approach of death they sing, and they sing sweeter and louder on the last days of their lives because they are going back to that God whom they serve." (Plato)
* The Roman Emperor Julius Caesar noted that the British tribes thought wild geese and swans "unlawful" to eat or kill. By medieval times, though, swans were considered an edible form of poultry. Nowadays they are protected in many countries.
* A Mute Swan was shown on the official Euro during 2005 when the Union was headed by the President of Ireland.
* The Mute Swan has been the national bird of Denmark since 1984. Prior to that, the Skylark was considered Denmark's national bird (since 1960).
* The fairy tale The Ugly Duckling by Hans Christian Andersen tells the story of a cygnet ostracised by his fellow barnyard fowl because of his perceived homeliness. To his delight (and to the surprise of others), he matures into a graceful swan, the most beautiful bird of all.
* Today, the Crown (the British monarch) retains the right to ownership of all unmarked mute swans in open water, but the Queen only exercises her ownership on certain stretches of the Thames and its surrounding tributaries. This ownership is shared with the Vintners' and Dyers' Companies, who were granted rights of ownership by the Crown in the 15th century.[28] See Swan upping.
* The Mute Swans in the moat at the Bishops Palace at Wells Cathedral in Wells, England have for centuries been trained to ring bells via strings attached to them to beg for food. Two swans are still able to ring for lunch.[29]
* The pair of swans in the Boston Public Garden are named Romeo and Juliet after the Shakespearian couple, however, it was found that both are female.[30]
* Camille Saint-Saëns composed a movement called Le Cygne in The Carnival of the Animals. It is played by solo cello and two pianos and represents a swan gliding over the water (cello) and the ripples it creates (pianos).


References

1. ^ a b c d e Hoyo, J. del, et al., eds. (1992). Handbook of the Birds of the World, vol. 1. Barcelona: Lynx Edicions. pp. 577–78. ISBN 84-87334-10-5.
2. ^ a b c d e Snow, D. W.; & Perrins, C. M. (1998). The Birds of the Western Palearctic (Concise ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-854099-X.
3. ^ a b Madge, S. and Burn, H. (1987). Wildfowl: An Identification Guide to the Ducks, Geese and Swans of the World. A & C Black. ISBN 0-7470-2201-1.
4. ^ Cheng, Tso-hsin (1987). A Synopsis of the Avifauna of China. Beijing: Science Press. pp. 48–49. ISBN 3-490-12518-5.
5. ^ Liddell, Henry George and Robert Scott (1980). A Greek-English Lexicon (Abridged Edition). United Kingdom: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-910207-4.
6. ^ Simpson, D.P. (1979). Cassell's Latin Dictionary (5 ed.). London: Cassell Ltd.. ISBN 0-304-52257-0.
7. ^ Northcote, EM (1981). "Size difference between limb bones of recent and subfossil Mute Swans (Cygnus olor)". J. Archeol.Sci. 8 (1): 89–98. doi:10.1016/0305-4403(81)90014-5.
8. ^ Palmer, RS (1976). Handbook of North American Birds, vol.2. New haven: Yale University Press.
9. ^ a b Jefferson, GT (2005). Fossil Treasures of the Anza-Borrego Desert. pp. 153.
10. ^ a b Latham, John (1824). General History of Birds. pp. 220–23.
11. ^ a b c Cramp, S., chief editor (1977). The Birds of the Western Palearctic. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-857358-8.
12. ^ Parrott, D., & McKay, H. V. (2001). Mute swan grazing on winter crops: Estimation of yield loss in oilseed rape and wheat. Mute swans occasionally eat insects, amphibians and smaller birds. J. Crop Protection 20: 913-919.
13. ^ Hogan CM (2006). Environmental Database for Oland, Sweden. Lumina Press.
14. ^ Scott, P. and the Wildfowl Trust. Behavioral patterns of juvenile Mute Swans. 1972.
15. ^ The Berwick Swan and Wildlife Trust
16. ^ Dement'ev, G.P.; N.A. Gladkov (1967). Birds of the Soviet Union, vol. IV. US Fish & Wildlife Translation.
17. ^ Austin, G.; Collier, M., Calbrade, N., Hall, C., & Musgrove, A. (2008). Waterbirds in the UK 2006/07. Thetford: Wetland Bird Survey. ISBN 978-1-906204-33-4.
18. ^ Baker, H., et al. (2006). "Population estimates of birds in Great Britain". British Birds 99: 25–44.
19. ^ Ticehurst, N. E. (1957). The Mute Swan in England. London: Cleaver-Hume Press.
20. ^ Holloway, S. (1996). The Historical Atlas of Breeding Birds in Britain and Ireland 1875-1900. London: Poyser. ISBN 0-85661-094-1.
21. ^ Save The Mute Swans
22. ^ a b Final List of Bird Species to Which the Migratory Bird Treaty Act Does Not Apply
23. ^ "Protection status changes to Wildlife Act". New Zealand Government. 10 June 2010. http://feeds.beehive.govt.nz/release/protection+status+changes+wildlife+act.
24. ^ "Rapid increase in the lower Great Lakes population of feral mute swans: a review and a recommendation". Wildlife Society Bulletin 31 (2): 407. 2010. http://cat.inist.fr/?aModele=afficheN&cpsidt=14981898.
25. ^ Allin, Charles C. and Husband, Thomas P. (September 2003). "Mute Swan (Cygnus olor) impact on submerged aquatic vegetation and macroinvertebrates in a Rhode Island coastal pond". Northeastern Naturalist 10 (3): 305–318. doi:10.1656/1092-6194(2003)010[0305:MSCOIO]2.0.CO;2. http://www.bioone.org/perlserv/?request=get-abstract&doi=10.1656%2F1092-6194(2003)010%5B0305%3AMSCOIO%5D2.0.CO%3B2&ct=1.
26. ^ Federal Register Vol. 68, No. 152: 47085
27. ^ "Bird lovers, Conn. are at odds on swans". Boston Globe. 24 December 2007. http://www.boston.com/news/local/connecticut/articles/2007/12/24/bird_lovers_conn_are_at_odds_on_swans/. Retrieved 7 April 2009.
28. ^ British Monarchy website regarding swan upping and the Crown's ownership of Mute Swans.
29. ^ Bell Ringing Swans Of Wells
30. ^ Slack, Donovan (2005-08-12). "Thou art no Romeo". The Boston Globe. http://www.boston.com/news/local/articles/2005/08/12/thou_art_no_romeo/. Retrieved 2009-12-26.

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