Procellariiformes

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Procellariiformes
Short-tailed Albatrossshowing tubenose structure
Short-tailed Albatross
showing tubenose structure
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Procellariiformes
Fürbringer, 1888
Families

Procellariidae
Diomedeidae
Hydrobatidae
Pelecanoididae

Procellariiformes (from the Latin procella, a storm) is an order of birds formerly called Tubinares and still called tubenoses in English.

They are all highly pelagic seabirds (feeding in the open ocean), and all of them have their nostrils enclosed in one or two tubes on their straight, deeply grooved bills with hooked tips. The beaks are made up from several plates. Wings are long and narrow; feet are webbed, and the hind toe is undeveloped or non-existent. Plumage is predominantly black or gray.

The tubes may be used to smell or to excrete salt when these birds drink salt water.

The longer-winged species fly using a switchback technique to minimise active flapping. All eat fish, squid or similar marine prey.

Most are almost unable to walk on land, and many species visit their remote breeding islands only at night. The exceptions are the huge albatrosses, several of the gadfly petrels and shearwaters and the fulmar-petrels. The latter can disable even large predatory birds with their obnoxious stomach oil, which they can project some distance. This stomach oil is a digestive residue created in the foregut of all tubenoses except the diving petrels, and is used mainly for storage of energy rich food as well as for defence.

There are a total of 93 species of Procellariiformes world-wide, divided among four families:

The Hydrobatidae's two subfamilies, Oceanitinadae and Hydrobatinae, are probably better treated as distinct families (Nunn & Stanley 1998).

Procellariiformes are most closely related to Sphenisciformes (Penguins).

In the Sibley-Ahlquist taxonomy, the tubenoses are included in a greatly enlarged order Ciconiiformes. This taxonomic treatment is almost certainly erroneous, but the assumption of a close evolutionary relationship may be correct[citation needed].

  • Nunn, G & Stanley, S. (1998): Body Size Effects and Rates of Cytochrome b Evolution in Tube-Nosed Seabirds. Molecular Biology and Evolution 15(10): 1360-1371 PDF fulltext Corrigendum
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