Postby Wingman » Mon Feb 21, 2011 11:54 am
Just got an email back from MDWFP Biologist, Houston Havens. You will see replies from Doc Kaminski at State and Canadian biologists Ray Alisauskas and Gilles Gauthier as well as Dave Ankney.
Alisauskas: That is definitely a greater, but it looks like a diamondback like you see on some lessers. I wonder how often Gilles Gauthier sees blue morphs of greaters?
Kaminski: Thanks Ray and Gilles. I never heard the term "diamondback". What is its meaning? Rick
Alisauskas: When it is flying with the wings spread, the incomplete blue plumage looks kind of like a diamond
Ankney: You may have first heard it from me, Ray, perhaps at LPB, but it was Graham who named it -- one of 6 Blue Goose morphs that he describes / illustrates in his Ph.D. thesis: As I recall, #1 is a pure Blue Goose, #2-4 show increasing amounts of white on the breast, belly, and neck, #5 is the Diamondback, and #6 is a pure Snow Goose.
Gauthier: Blue morphs are definitely present in greater snow geese. For the past 20 years, we have been banding a few of those on Bylot Island every year. Probably in he range of ~0.5% of the birds that we catch every year.
Kaminski: This thread of email from arctic goose specialists in Canada addresses your queries about the large, blue-marked snow goose harvested in Mississippi. Apparently, greater snow geese do experience gene flow with blue-phase lesser snow geese but only rarely. Thanks Dave, Gilles, and Ray. Rick
ISAIAH 40:31
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