Bryan's shearwater
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Procellariiformes
Family: Procellariidae
Genus: Puffinus
Species:
P. bryani
Binomial name
Puffinus bryani
Pyle, Welch & Fleischer, RC, 2011

Bryan's shearwater (Puffinus bryani) is a species of shearwater that may occur around the Hawaiian Islands. It is the smallest species of shearwater and is black and white with a bluish gray beak and blue tarsi. First collected in 1963 and thought to be a little shearwater (Puffinus assimilis) it was determined using DNA analysis to be distinct in 2011. It is rare and possibly threatened and there is little information on its breeding or non-breeding ranges. The species is named after Edwin Horace Bryan Jr. a former curator of the B. P. Bishop Museum at Honolulu.[2]

On February 7, 2012, DNA tests on six specimens found in Ogasawara alive and dead between 1997 and 2011 determined that they were Bryan's shearwaters.[3][4] It is assumed that Bryan's shearwaters still survive on some of the uninhabited Bonin Islands.[5]

In 2015 a small breeding colony of Bryan's shearwaters was found on the island of Higashijima in Japan.[6]

References

  1. BirdLife International (2018). "Puffinus bryani". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T45354718A132254426. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T45354718A132254426.en. Retrieved 20 November 2021.
  2. Pyle, P.; Welch, A.J.; Fleischer, R.C. (2011). "A new species of shearwater (Puffinus) recorded from Midway Atoll, Northwestern Hawaiian Islands". The Condor. 113 (3): 518–527. doi:10.1525/cond.2011.100117.
  3. 絶滅したと思われていたミズナギドリの希少種を小笠原諸島で再発見 (PDF) (in Japanese). Forestry and Forest Products Research Institute. Retrieved February 7, 2012.
  4. "PSG 2012 Hawaii Abstract" (PDF). Pacific Seabird Group. p. 37. Retrieved February 10, 2012.
  5. Kawakami, K.; Eda, M.; Horikoshi, K.; Suzuki, H.; Chiba, H.; Hiraoka, T. (2012). "Bryan's shearwaters have survived on the Bonin Islands, Northwestern Pacific". The Condor. 114 (3): 507–512. doi:10.1525/cond.2012.110196.
  6. "Amazing Discovery: Nearly Extinct Bird Found Breeding in Japan".
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