Backyard Birds

Pink Pigeons

Pink Pigeons (Nesoenas Mayeri)

The Pink Pigeons (Nesoenas Mayeri) are species of Columbidae (doves and pigeons) endemic to Mauritius, and now very rare. It has been conserved through the efforts of Gerald Durrell and the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust in the 1960s.

(Columbidae – Please see also Doves)

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Pink Pigeon

The Pink Pigeon is a species of Columbidae (doves and pigeons) endemic to Mauritius, and now very rare.

It has been conserved through the efforts of Gerald Durrell and the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust in the 1960s. The book Golden Bats and Pink Pigeons by Gerald Durrell refers to the conservation efforts.

The IUCN has recently downlisted the species from critically endangered to endangered.

Mauritius has brought out a series of stamps depicting the endemic Pink Pigeon.

Pink Pigeons Description

An adult pigeon is about 32 cm from beak to tail and 350 gram in weight. Pink pigeons have pale pink plumage on their head, shoulders and underside, along with pink feet and beak. They have dark brown wings, and a broad, reddish-brown tail. They have dark brown eyes surrounded by a ring of red skin.

Newly hatched pigeons have sparse, downy-white feathers and closed eyes.

 

Pink Pigeons Phylogeny

Initially classified as a true pigeon, it was re-classified in a monotypic (one single species) genus by Tommaso Salvadori. Recent DNA analyses suggests its nearest neighbour on the phylogenetic tree is the geographically close Madagascar Turtle Dove (Streptopelia picturata), and has thus been placed in the Streptopelia genus, which mostly contains turtle doves.

However, the two species form a distinct group that cannot unequivocally be assigned to either Streptopelia or Columba, and indeed, placing the two species in Nesoenas may best reflect the fact that they seem to belong to a distinct evolutionary lineage (Johnson et al., 2001)

Pink Pigeons Range

It is only found in the Mascarene island of Mauritius, a related form having become extinct in the neighbouring larger Reunion Island.

On Mauritius, it is found in patches of forest in the Southwest.

Pink Pigeons Habitat

It prefers upland evergreen forests. Destruction of these forests have been a major reason for its decline.

Pink Pigeons Feeding

It feeds on native plants – by consuming buds, flowers, leaves, shoots, fruits and seeds. Non-native species like Guava pose a threat to it by preventing growth of native trees. It does supplement its diet at feeding stations manned by conservation officials.

Pink Pigeons Social Habits

They feed and roost in small flocks.

Pink Pigeons Breeding

The breeding season starts in August-September. The male courts the female with a “step and bow” display. Mating is monogamous, with the pair making a flimsy platform nest and defending a small area around it (even though the pigeons initially had no natural predators). The female usually lays 2 white eggs, and incubation duration is 2 weeks. The male incubates during the day, and the female during night and early day.

Males remain fertile till 17 – 18 years of age, females till 10 – 11 years of age.

Rearing Young

1 – 7 days: Chicks eyes closed, fed entirely on crop milk.

7 – 10 days: Chicks undergo a dietary transformation to solid food.

2 – 4 weeks: Chicks fledge, but are parent-fed.

4 – 6/7 weeks: Chicks remain in the nest. After this the chicks leave the nest.

 

Pink Pigeons Demography and Longevity

Due to habitat destruction, and non-native predators, the population had dropped to 10 in 1991. The captive breeding and reintroduction program initiated and supported by the Durrell Wildlife Conservation Trust, and largely carried out by the Mauritian Wildlife Foundation has resulted in a stable population of about 350 in the wild in 2001, as well as a healthy captive population as backup. There are more males than females in a population due to greater life expectancy of the male (about 5 years more). The average life expectancy upper bound is estimated at 17 – 18 years.

References

  • Johnson, Kevin P.; de Kort, Selvino; Dinwoodey, Karen, Mateman, A. C.; ten Cate, Carel; Lessells, C. M. and Clayton, Dale H. (2001): A molecular phylogeny of the dove genera Streptopelia and Columba. Auk 118(4): 874-887.
  • The Mauritius Pink Pigeon Report. Durrell Wildife Conservation Trust, 2001.

 

Copyright: Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia.org … Additional information and photos added by Avianweb.

 


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Gordon Ramel

Gordon is an ecologist with two degrees from Exeter University. He's also a teacher, a poet and the owner of 1,152 books. Oh - and he wrote this website.

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