White Tern
Sir David Attenborough presents the widespread marine species, the white tern.
Tweet of the Day is the voice of birds and our relationship with them, from around the world.
Sir David Attenborough presents the widespread marine species, the white tern. Also known as fairy terns or angel terns, these are very slender, long-winged birds, brilliant white except for a black, slightly-upturned bill, dark eyes and very short blue-grey legs. In flight, their wings appear almost translucent. For such a delicate-looking bird, they have rather harsh calls. Unusually they lay their eggs on a bare branch. The female tern selects a small groove in the bark or on the leaf-stalks of palms where her single egg will be most secure. Here, on its tropical tightrope, the egg is safer from ground predators like rats and because there's no nesting material, there's less chance of parasites.
Producer : Andrew Dawes
Last on
White Tern (Gygis alba)
Webpage image courtesy of Dave Watts / naturepl.com.
NPL Ref 01091950 © Dave Watts / naturepl.com.
Broadcasts
- New Year's Day 201505:58BBC Radio 4
- Wed 2 Dec 201505:58BBC Radio 4
- Fri 12 Oct 201805:58BBC Radio 4
- Thu 10 Sep 202005:58BBC Radio 4
- Tue 3 Jan 202305:58BBC Radio 4
Podcast: Planet Puffin
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