- Vampire Finch
Taxobox
name = Vampire Finch
regnum =Animal ia
phylum = Chordata
classis = Aves
ordo =Passeriformes
familia =Emberizidae
genus = "Geospiza "
species = "G. difficilis"
subspecies = "G. d. septentrionalis"
trinomial = "Geospiza difficilis septentrionalis"
trinomial_authority = (Rothschild & Hartert,1899 )The Vampire Finch ("Geospiza difficilis septentrionalis") is a small
bird native to theGalápagos Islands . It is a very distinctsubspecies of theSharp-beaked Ground Finch ("Geospiza difficilis") endemic to Wolf andDarwin Island s (Grant "et al." 2000).The vampire finch is sexually dimorphic as typical for its
genus , with the males being primarily black and the females grey with brown streaks. It has the largest and most pointed beak of all "G. difficilis" subspecies, and overall looks like a miniatureCommon Cactus-Finch rather than, as the other subspecies do, a largeSmall Ground-Finch with a straight bill (Schluter & Grant 1984). It has a lilting song on Wolf, a buzzing song on Darwin, and whistling calls on both islands; only on Wolf, a drawn-out, buzzing call is also uttered.(Grant "et al." 2000)This bird is most famous for its unusual diet. The Vampire Finch occasionally feeds on the blood of seabirds, chiefly the Nazca and Blue-footed Boobies, pecking at their skin with their sharp beaks until blood is drawn (Schluter & Grant 1984). Curiously, the boobies do not offer much resistance against this. It has been theorized that this behavior evolved from the pecking behavior that the finch used to clean
parasite s from the plumage of the boobyFact|date=February 2007. The finches also feed on eggs, stealing them just after they are laid and rolling them (by pushing with their legs and using their beak as a pivot) into rocks until they break.More conventionally for birds, but still unusual among "Geospiza", they also take
nectar fromGalápagos prickly pear ("Opuntia echios" var. "gigantea") flowers at least on Wolf (Schluter & Grant 1984). The reasons for these peculiar feeding habits are the lack offreshwater on these birds' home islands. Nonetheless, the mainstay of their diet is made up from seeds andinvertebrates as in their congeners (Schluter & Grant 1984).The vampire finch is endangered, being a small-island endemic. The Galápagos finch species collectively form a showcase example of
Charles Darwin 's theory ofnatural selection . The 12 or 13 species of Galapagos finches are often called "Darwin's Finches ", who collected and studied the differences between them. They are used as an example of how the descendants of one ancestor can evolve into several species as they adapt to different conditions. Darwin and his colleagues such asAlfred Russel Wallace are now recognised as the men who provided the foundations for the entire structure of modern biology.References
* Grant, Peter R.; Grant, B. Rosemary & Petren, Kenneth (2000): The allopatric phase of speciation: the sharp-beaked ground finch ("Geospiza difficilis") on the Galápagos islands. "Biol. J. Linn. Soc." 69(3): 287–317. [http://www.biology.uc.edu/faculty/petren/LAB/publications/2000GrantPetrenBJLS.pdf PDF fulltext]
* Schluter, Dolph & Grant, Peter R. (1984): Ecological Correlates of Morphological Evolution in a Darwin's Finch, "Geospiza difficilis". "Evolution" 38(4): 856-869. DOI|10.2307/2408396 (HTML abstract and first page image)
External links
*CentralPets.com: [http://www.centralpets.com/animals/birds/wild_birds/wbd6130.html Vampire Finch] . Retrieved 2006-DEC-19.
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