Podiceps occipitalis Garnot, 1826 is a animal in the Podicipedidae family, order Podicipediformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Podiceps occipitalis Garnot, 1826 (Podiceps occipitalis Garnot, 1826)
🦋 Animalia

Podiceps occipitalis Garnot, 1826

Podiceps occipitalis Garnot, 1826

Podiceps occipitalis (silvery grebe) is a small grebe with two plumage-varying subspecies found in western South America.

Family
Genus
Podiceps
Order
Podicipediformes
Class
Aves

About Podiceps occipitalis Garnot, 1826

The silvery grebe (Podiceps occipitalis Garnot, 1826) reaches approximately 28 cm (11 in) in length. It has two recognized subspecies that differ in the coloration of their head and facial plumes. For the southern subspecies, the ear plumes are yellowish, and the sides of the head and throat are grey. For the northern subspecies, the ear plumes are grey, and the sides of the head and throat are white. Both subspecies share the same general plumage pattern: a black crown, white neck, chest and belly, dark grey back, and blackish sides and flanks. Both also have black beaks and feet, and red eyes. The northern subspecies in particular looks similar to the rare, highly localized Junin grebe (Podiceps taczanowskii), and the two species have overlapping ranges. The silvery grebe nests in Argentina, the Falkland Islands, Chile, and the western parts of Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador and Colombia. The southern silvery grebe is migratory; in winter it ranges north to Paraguay, southern Bolivia and southern Brazil, and possibly also occurs in Uruguay. Its habitat consists of freshwater lakes, lagoons, reservoirs and ponds. In the Andes, it generally prefers weakly alkaline lakes, and is sometimes found foraging on hypersaline lakes. In Patagonia, it sometimes lives in saline lakes, where it can be seen alongside flamingoes.

Photo: (c) Mariano Fernández Kloster, some rights reserved (CC BY-NC), uploaded by Mariano Fernández Kloster · cc-by-nc

Taxonomy

Animalia Chordata Aves Podicipediformes Podicipedidae Podiceps

More from Podicipedidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy · Disclaimer

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