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Common loon
Common loon
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Common loon
Adult in breeding plumage in Minocqua, Wisconsin
In non-breeding plumage in Sunset Beach, North Carolina
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Gaviiformes
Family: Gaviidae
Genus: Gavia
Species:
G. immer
Binomial name
Gavia immer
(Brünnich, 1764)
Approximate distribution map
  Breeding
  Migration
  Nonbreeding
Synonyms[2]
  • Colymbus immer Brunnich, 1764
  • Colymbus glacialis Linnaeus, 1766

The common loon or great northern diver (Gavia immer) is a large member of the loon, or diver, family of birds. Breeding adults have a plumage that includes a broad black head and neck with a greenish, purplish, or bluish sheen, blackish or blackish-grey upperparts, and pure white underparts except some black on the undertail coverts and vent. Non-breeding adults are brownish with a dark neck and head marked with dark grey-brown. Their upperparts are dark brownish-grey with an unclear pattern of squares on the shoulders, and the underparts, lower face, chin, and throat are whitish. The sexes look alike, though males are significantly heavier than females. During the breeding season, loons live on lakes and other waterways in Canada, the northern United States (including Alaska), and southern parts of Greenland and Iceland. Small numbers breed on Svalbard and sporadically elsewhere in Arctic Eurasia. Common loons winter on both coasts of the US as far south as Mexico, and on the Atlantic coast of Europe.

Common loons eat a variety of animal prey including fish, crustaceans, insect larvae, molluscs, and occasionally aquatic plant life. They swallow most of their prey underwater, where it is caught, but some larger items are first brought to the surface. Loons are monogamous; that is, a single female and male often together defend a territory and may breed together for a decade or more. Both members of a pair build a large nest out of dead marsh grasses and other plants formed into a mound along the vegetated shores of lakes. A single brood is raised each year from a clutch of one or two olive-brown oval eggs with dark brown spots which are incubated for about 28 days by both parents. Fed by both parents, the chicks fledge in 70 to 77 days. The chicks are capable of diving underwater when just a few days old, and they fly to their wintering areas before ice forms in the fall.

The common loon is assessed as a species of least concern on the IUCN Red List of Endangered Species. It is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds applies. The United States Forest Service has designated the common loon a species of special status because of threats from habitat loss and toxic metal poisoning in its US range.

The common loon is the provincial bird of Ontario, and it appears on Canadian currency, including the one-dollar "loonie" coin and a previous series of $20 bills. In 1961, it was designated the state bird of Minnesota, and appears on the Minnesota State Quarter and the state Seal of Minnesota.

Taxonomy

[edit]

The common loon is also known as the great northern diver in Eurasia. Another former name, great northern loon, was a compromise proposed by the International Ornithological Committee.[3] It is one of five loon species that make up the genus Gavia, the only genus of the family Gaviidae and order Gaviiformes. Its closest relative is another large black-headed species, the yellow-billed loon or white-billed diver (Gavia adamsii).[4] There are no recognized subspecies of the common loon.[5]

Danish zoologist and mineralogist Morten Thrane Brünnich first described the common loon in 1764, as Colymbus immer in his Ornithologia Borealis.[6] The now-defunct genus Colymbus contained grebes as well as loons,[7] and remained in use[a] until the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature attempted to clarify the nomenclature in 1956 by declaring Colymbus a suppressed name unfit for further use and establishing Gavia, created by Johann Reinhold Forster in 1788, as the valid genus name for the loons.[8]

The current genus name Gavia was the Latin term for an unidentified seabird and the specific immer is derived from a Norwegian name for the bird,[9] similar to the modern Icelandic word "himbrimi".[10] The word may be related to Swedish immer and emmer: the grey or blackened ashes of a fire (referring to the loon's dark plumage); or to Latin immergo, to immerse, and immersus, submerged.[11]

The European name "diver" comes from the bird's practice of catching fish by diving.[12] The North American name "loon" was first recorded in this sense in New Englands Prospect (1634) by William Wood (1580–1639); "The Loone is an ill shap'd thing like a Cormorant".[13][14] It may be derived from Old Norse lómr, as are modern Swedish and Danish lom,[15] in each case referring to the distinctive call.[16]

A number of fossil loon species are known from the Pliocene, and specimens from the Pleistocene of California and Florida appear to represent a paleosubspecies of the common loon.[17]

Description

[edit]

The adult common loon can range from 66 to 91 cm (26 to 36 in) in length with a 127 to 147 cm (4 ft 2 in to 4 ft 10 in) wingspan,[2] slightly smaller than the similar yellow-billed loon.[18] On average, it is about 81 cm (32 in) long and has a wingspan of 136 cm (54 in). Its weight can vary anywhere from 2.2 to 7.6 kg (4.9 to 16.8 lb).[19][20] Sizes vary regionally, especially by body mass, with the smallest bodied loons on average from lower-central Canada and the Great Lakes, while westerly birds are similar or mildly larger, and loons breeding further east can appear to be significantly larger. Furthermore, males average up to nearly 27% more massive than females in some populations.[21] Breeding loons in Maine averaged 4.65 kg (10.3 lb) in females and 5.97 kg (13.2 lb) in males, essentially the same weight as the yellow-billed loon, although the yellow-billed is still larger than in linear dimensions (especially bill length) than the Maine loons.[20] In Ontario, 20 females averaged 4.5 kg (9.9 lb) and 20 males averaged 5.46 kg (12.0 lb).[22] In contrast, in the Gulf of Alaska, adults of both sexes reportedly averaged 4.13 kg (9.1 lb).[23] Adult breeding plumage consists of a broad black head and neck with greenish, purplish, or bluish sheen.[2] It has a black bill sometimes with a pale tip, and red eyes.[2][19] The neck is encircled with a characteristic black ring[24] and has two white necklaces of eight to ten short streaks on the upper foreneck, and a noticeable collar of white, parallel lines forming a large oval on the neck-side.[2][19] The central lower foreneck is pure white, and the lower neck-sides has longitudinal white lines becoming rows of small spots and black lines becoming very narrow. The upperparts are blackish or blackish grey, and each feather has small white spots on it. The upperwing is blackish and with small white spots on the non-primary coverts, whereas the underwing is paler with white coverts except the long black shaft-streaks on the axillaries. The underparts are pure white, but have some black on the undertail coverts and vent.[2] It has a checkered black-and-white mantle[24] and a blackish tail. The legs are pale grey on the inner half and blackish on the outer half, and the webs between the toes are flesh colored.[2]

Common loon stretching

Adult non-breeding plumage is brownish with a dark neck and head marked with dark grey-brown.[2][24] The eyes are surrounded with white,[2] and the eyelids are pale.[24] The bill is mostly pale grey, with a dark culmen and tip, but in early spring the tip may turn whitish. The underparts, lower face, chin, and throat are also whitish. The foreneck is whitish, usually forming wedge-shaped notch in dark neck-sides,[2] and may sometimes reveal a shadowy trace of the neck ring or a pale collar.[24] It has dark brownish grey upperparts with an unclear pattern of squares on the shoulders and some wing coverts spotted with white, which are usually concealed while swimming. The male and the female have similar appearances,[2] although they exhibit sexual dimorphism in their physical dimensions with the male larger and significantly heavier than the female.[18]

The heavy dagger-like bill[19] is evenly tapered and greyish, sometimes having a black tip.[24] The bill colour and angle distinguish this species from the yellow-billed loon. The neck is short and thick.[24] The common loon swims very low in the water, with sometimes only its head held above and horizontal to the surface.[19] It must run across the water surface to get in flight. During flight, its head is slightly lower than its body, with its feet trailing behind.[19] It has a skeletal structure made up of a number of solid bones (this is usual for the Gaviiformes and penguins[25] but unlike most flying birds which have bones with extensive pneumatization, hollow and filled with air to make the skeleton lighter), which adds weight but helps in diving.[26]

Juvenile off Mcgee Island, Maine

A juvenile often has a dark, brownish-grey nape that may look darker than the pale-edged black feathers.[27] It has a dark grey to black head, neck, and upperparts, with white throat, cheeks, and underparts.[19] During the first winter, the bill shape of the young may not be as fully developed as that of the adult,[27] and during the second winter, it much resembles the breeding adult, but with wing coverts lacking white spots.[2]

The common loon is distinguished from the black-throated loon (G. arctica) and the red-throated loon (G. stellata) mainly by its larger size. It usually has a steeper forehead and a bulging forecrown, somewhat similar to the black-throated loon. Its bill is heavier and the back is paler than its hindneck. It is more difficult to separate from the yellow-billed loon, but its breeding plumage has more white markings on the neck and the squares on its shoulders are usually smaller; the non-breeding plumage has darker neck-sides contrasting more sharply with pale areas and bill colour.[2]

Moult

[edit]

The scaly juvenile plumage is retained until January or February of the year following hatching, when a lengthy moult of head and body feathers gives them a more adult-like appearance. Adults shed all their flight feathers simultaneously around this time, leaving them temporarily flightless, prior to gaining breeding plumage, but second-year birds delay this substantial moult until the summer. The adult winter plumage is attained between October and January by partial moult mainly of head, body and tail feathers.[28]

Genomics

[edit]

With improved gene-sequencing technology, a draft genome of the common loon has assembled and identified at least 14,169 genes. 80.7% of chicken genes are found in the common loon genome. The physiological costs of deep-water diving and long distance aerial migration of loons have greatly affected loon evolution. Many identified genes are candidate genes for positive selection since the common loon-chicken split 90 million years ago. It is theorized that these candidate genes are related to haemoglobin affinity for oxygen, solute exchange, immunoglobulin function related to immune defence, nervous system development and a number of molecular pathways related to DNA metabolic function, and G-receptor pathways potentially involved in low-light visual acuity. For example, SLC48A, and SLC20A1 are candidate genes in the Gavia lineage for maintaining homeostasis due to maybe having a role in maintaining ion and pH balance.[29]

Distribution and habitat

[edit]

Common loons are mainly Nearctic, and breed from 48° N to the Arctic Circle, locally south to 40° N and north to 78° N.[2] During their breeding season in spring and summer, most common loons live on lakes and other waterways in the northern United States and Canada, as well as in southern parts of Greenland,[30] in Iceland, in Svalbard, in Jan Mayen, and in Bear Island in Norway; and in Alaska, to the west, and very rarely in Scotland, to the east.[2] Their summer habitat ranges from wooded lakes to tundra ponds. The lakes must be large enough for flight take-off, and provide a large population of small fish.[30] Deep lakes with warm surface waters, relatively low biological productivity and low turbidity where their fish prey are easy to see are habitats where breeding loons are more successful in raising young.[31] For protection from predators, common loons favour lakes with islands and coves.[32] They are rare visitors to the Arctic coast.[33] They are known to exhibit high breeding site fidelity.[34]

Common Loon
In Bodega Bay, California

Some common loons remain in Iceland year-round, although most migrate. In North America, they winter mainly along north Atlantic and north-east Pacific coasts, many stopping off on the Great Lakes during their migration.[2] They migrate in the day, starting about two hours after sunrise and flying at altitudes of 1500 to 2700 m above sea level, above the convective and turbulent layer of air.[35] In winter they can be seen on North America coasts as far south as Baja California, Sonora, northern Sinaloa, southern Texas, and rarely northern Tamaulipas.[36][37] In the east, several thousand winter along western European coasts, probably originating from Iceland, Greenland, and Canada.[2] Their range extends into northwestern Europe from Finland to Portugal and southern and northwestern Spain (Galicia and Asturias), as well as the western Mediterranean off Catalonia, and off Morocco in Africa, although only a few hundred travel as far south as Iberia.[1][2][37] Although wintering site fidelity is not well known, annually, adults are observed to return to the same wintering locations in the Pacific Ocean (Morro Bay), the Gulf of Mexico (Barataria Bay), the Atlantic Ocean (Maryland and Massachusetts), and the reservoir Lake Pateros.[34]

They usually winter along coasts and on inland lakes, bays, inlets, and streams,[30] with birds migrating to the nearest body of water that will not freeze over in the winter: western Canadian loons go to the Pacific, Great Lakes loons to the Gulf of Mexico region, eastern Canadian loons to the Atlantic, and some loons to large inland lakes and reservoirs.[32] They appear in most of the inland waters of the United States. The South Carolina coast, the Gulf coast adjacent to the Florida panhandle, and the Atlantic seaboard from Massachusetts to Maine have some of the highest concentrations of common loons.[38] Occasional vagrants are recorded inland in Mexico, in San Luis Potosí and Coahuila, as well as in Chiapas and Oaxaca in the south. They are accidental in northern Japan and the Commander Islands in northwestern Pacific, and Cuba in the West Indies.[2]

Behaviour

[edit]
Swimming

The common loon is an expert fisher, catching its prey underwater by diving as deep as 60 m (200 ft).[26] With its large webbed feet, the common loon is an efficient underwater pursuit predator and adroit diver. It needs a long run-up distance to gain momentum for flight take-off and is ungainly on land, sliding on its belly and pushing itself forward with its legs. Its clumsiness on land is due to the legs being positioned at the rear of its body; the pelvic muscles are well developed,[39] ideal for swimming but not well-suited for walking. When it lands on water, it skims along on its belly to slow down, rather than braking with its feet, as they are set too far back. The common loon swims and dives well, and flies competently for hundreds of kilometres in migration. It flies with its neck outstretched, usually calling a particular tremolo that can be used to identify a flying loon. Its flying speed is as much as 120 km/h (75 mph) during migration.[26] Particularly during the breeding season, common loons frequently engage in territorial disputes against other water birds, including ducks and geese, and will attack or drive off competitors and intruders to their territory.[40][41]

Common loons sometimes form social gatherings of several adults in late summer. Studies in North America suggest that these events are attended largely by non-breeding individuals and relate to territory assessment and social familiarity rather than foraging or migration.[42]

Feeding

[edit]
Foraging

Fish account for about 80% of the diet of the common loon. It forages on fish of up to 26 cm (10 in) in length, including minnows, suckers, gizzard shad, rock bass, alewife, northern pike, whitefish, sauger, brown bullhead, pumpkinseed, burbot, walleye, bluegill, white crappie, black crappie, rainbow smelt, and killifish.[43] The young typically eat small minnows, and sometimes insects and fragments of green vegetation.[44] The freshwater diet primarily consists of pike, perch, sunfish, trout, and bass; the saltwater diet primarily consists of rock fish, flounder, sea trout, herring, Atlantic croaker, haddock, and Gulf silverside. When there is either a lack of fish or they are difficult to catch, it preys on crustaceans, crayfish, snails, leeches, insect larvae, molluscs, frogs, annelids, and occasionally aquatic plant matter such as pondweed, roots, moss, willow shoots, seeds, and algae.[2][32][45] It has also been known to eat ducklings.[45]

The common loon uses its powerful hind legs to propel its body underwater at high speed to catch its prey, which it then swallows head-first. If the fish attempts to evade the common loon, the bird chases it down with excellent underwater manoeuvrability due to its strong legs.[32] Most prey are swallowed underwater, where they are caught, but some larger prey are first brought to the surface. It is a visual predator, so it is essential to hunting success that the water is clear.[44] It normally dives 4 to 10 m (13 to 33 ft), but has been recorded to dive up to 70 m (230 ft).[2] The average diving time is 42 seconds,[26] but the maximum duration spent underwater is about 1 min (60 s).[2]

Breeding

[edit]
On a waterside nest in Maine
Egg
Taxidermied common loon at the Milwaukee Public Museum

The common loon's mating system is serially monogamous; breeding pairs jointly defend a territory consisting of an entire small lake or a protected bay within a large lake.[46] A given male and female remain together throughout a breeding attempt, rear their own biological offspring,[47] reunite each spring, and may breed together for many consecutive years. However, in the event of death or territorial eviction of one pair member by an intruding loon of the same sex, the other pair member quickly establishes a pair bond with the evicting bird.[48] Hence, most adult loons have two or more different mates during their lives. Evicting individuals tend to be young males and females (5 to 9 years old), while evicted adults are often those 15 years and older.[49][50]

Pairs do not remain together during winter;[2][18] in addition, males usually precede females by a few days to a few weeks during spring migration, settling on their lake once a portion of it becomes ice-free.[51] Copulation takes place ashore, often on the nest site, repeated daily until the eggs are laid. The preceding courtship is very simple, with mutual bill-dipping and dives.[52] The displays towards intruders, such as bow-jumping (an alternation of fencing and bill-dipping postures[11] and rushing (running "along the surface with its wings either folded or half-extended and flapping at about the same speed as when taking off"[53]) are often misinterpreted as courtship.[45]

Nesting typically begins in early May.[54] Significantly more nesting sites are found on islands than on mainland shoreline.[55] Breeding pairs patrol their territories routinely, even at night,[56] defending the territory both physically and vocally.[57] Pairs that nested together the preceding year typically reuse the nest site from the previous year, if they hatched chicks successfully there. In contrast, pairs that lost their eggs to a predator usually shift the nest to a new location.[58] This logical behaviour pattern appears to depend upon the male, because breeding pairs consisting of last year's male and a female not present during the preceding year continue to exhibit the behaviour; pairs composed of last year's female and a new male tend to select a new nest site, regardless of the success or failure of the previous year's attempt.[58] Despite the lead role of males in nest site selection, both sexes contribute substantially to nest construction.[32] The nest is about 56 cm (22 in) wide and is constructed out of dead marsh grasses and other indigenous plants, and formed into a mound along the vegetated coasts of lakes greater than 3.7 ha (9.1 acres).[19][32] After a week of construction in late spring, one parent climbs on top to mould the interior of the nest to the shape of its body.[32] Based on a number of studies, nesting success averages about 40%, and most newly hatched young survive due to parental care.[59]

Eggs from first clutches are typically laid in May or early June, the timing depending largely upon the date that lakes become ice-free and inhabitable.[32] A clutch consists of two (occasionally one) olive-brown oval eggs with dark brown spots.[19] Incubation is carried out jointly by male and female and lasts about 28 days.[18][44] Loons often place nests along steep lake shorelines where adults can quickly dive underwater when approached by predators.[60] The eggs are about 88 mm (3.5 in) long and 55 mm (2.2 in) wide[32] and the two eggs are laid with an interval of one to three days between them,[43] and hatch asynchronously.[59]

Newly hatched chicks are dark chocolate brown in colour and have a white belly. Within hours of hatching, the young begin to leave the nest with the parents, swimming close by and sometimes riding on one parent's back.[32] Parents and chicks initially stay in shallow, isolated bays where the parents are able to defend the chicks better from intruding loons and eagles, which are their main predators.[60][61] Male parents defend broods consisting of two chicks more vigorously than singleton chicks, chiefly with the territorial yodel call.[61] The chicks are capable of making shallow dives from their first day[62] but make deeper dives as they grow.[18] Fledging takes 70 to 77 days.[2] Usually, only one brood is raised.[32] Both parents feed the chicks live prey from hatching to fledging. As they grow, chicks are able to catch an increasingly large proportion of their diet by themselves; they can feed and fend for themselves after about two months, although many juveniles continue to beg from adults well beyond this age. The parent birds capture small fish and hold them crosswise in their bill, call and approach the chicks with their head lowered so that the chicks can grasp them.[62] If food is scarce, the larger chick may peck its small sibling incessantly; on small lakes with limited food, only one chick often survives.[63] Juveniles leave the breeding ground before ice formation in the fall, weeks after their parents.[19] A pair of loons raising two chicks have been estimated to feed on 423 kilograms (933 lb) of fish during the five and a half months that they spend in their breeding territory.[62]

Habitat selection

[edit]

Loons exhibit a strong tendency to settle as breeders on a lake that resembles their natal one, a phenomenon termed natal habitat imprinting. This preference is based on two lake attributes: size and pH.[64] The behaviour is puzzling, because it is as strong in loons hatched on small, acidic lakes as those from large lakes of neutral pH. Hence, the former group is exhibiting active preference for lakes that have been shown to result in higher chick mortality and lower breeding success.[63][64]

Vocalizations

[edit]

The common loon produces a variety of vocalizations, the most common of which are the tremolo, the yodel, the wail, and the hoot. Each of these calls communicates a distinct message. The frequency at which it vocalizes has been shown to vary based on time of day, weather, and season. It is most vocally active between mid-May and mid-June. The wail, yodel, and tremolo calls are sounded more frequently at night than during the day; calls have also been shown to occur more frequently in cold temperatures and when there is little to no rain.[65]

The tremolo call—sometimes called the "laughing" call—is characterized by its short, wavering quality. It often uses this call to signal distress or alarm caused by territorial disputes or perceived threats.[65] It emits a tremulous series of up to 10 rather high notes (hu)-heheheheheheha.[2] It also uses the tremolo to communicate its presence to other loons when they arrive at a lake, often when they are flying overhead. It is the only vocalization used in flight.[66] The tremolo call has varying three levels of intensities that correlate with a loon's level of distress, and the types are differentiated by increasingly higher pitch frequencies added to the call.[67]

The yodel is a long and complex call made only by the male. It is used in the establishment of territorial boundaries and in territorial confrontations, and the length of the call corresponds with the loon's level of aggression.[68] The dominant frequencies in the yodel indicate the body mass and thereby the health of males.[69] A male that occupies a new territory appears to alter its yodel to be clearly distinguishable from the call of the previous territory owner.[70]

A loon's wail is a long call consisting of up to three notes, and is often compared to a wolf's howl. It uses this call to communicate its location to other loons. The call is given back and forth between breeding pairs or an adult and its chick, either to maintain contact or in an attempt to move closer together after being separated.[66] It is a loud aaoo, weee-wea weee-wea weee-wea, or ooo-aaah-éééé.[2]

The hoot is a short, soft call and is another form of contact call. It is a more intimate call than the wail and is used exclusively between small family groups or flocks.[65] The common loon hoots to let other family or flock members know where it is. This call is often heard when the adult loon is summoning its chicks to feed.[66]

Longevity and terminal investment

[edit]

Considerable information on longevity and survival rates has been collected in the past two decades, owing to the implementation of an efficient capture protocol that permits marking and monitoring of large study populations.[71] A rough preliminary analysis showed that common loons of both sexes survive at an annual rate of over 90% until they reach their mid-20s,[46] but show a survival rate of only about 75% thereafter. However, a second, finer-scaled analysis made clear that male loons begin to show higher mortality, increased territory loss and lower body condition starting at age 15.[50] Perhaps in response to their physical decline, males 15 and older show increased rates of both territorial aggression and territorial vocalization. This age-related shift in behaviour is interpreted as terminal investment, a "go for broke" strategy seen in senescing animals that are attempting to eke out another year or two of breeding before they die.[50]

Predators and parasites

[edit]

Adult common loons have few predators, although bald eagles will attack incubating birds. Attacks by sharks in winter have also been recorded.[18] When a predator approaches (either the loon's nest or the loon itself), the common loon sometimes attacks the predator by rushing at it and trying to stab it with its dagger-like bill, aiming its attacks either at the predator's abdomen or the back of its head or neck, which may be deadly to predators up to the size of a fox or raccoon.[72]

Eggs are taken by a number of mammals, including American mink, striped skunk, otters, foxes and raccoons, with the latter being responsible for nearly 40% of all nest failures. Birds such as herring gulls, northern ravens and American crows will eat unattended eggs. Because their nests are at the water's edge, common loon eggs are especially vulnerable if the adult is absent.[18]

Chicks may be killed by common snapping turtles, large gulls, bald eagles and large fish such as northern pike and largemouth bass. The eagle in particular is a significant predator of chicks.[18]

Internal parasites of the common loon include many species of worms, including flatworms, tapeworms, nematodes and spiny-headed worms.[73] High levels of worms may result from feeding changes due to low availability of fish, and can lead to illness and death.[74] Protozoal infections including one caused by Eimeria gaviae[75] and avian malaria have been recorded in this loon.[76] The black fly Simulium annulus is closely associated with the common loon to which it is attracted to chemicals in the uropygial gland secretions as well as by visual and tactile cues. This fly is detrimental to loons, their preferred hosts, transmitting blood-borne parasites and viruses, and causing nest abandonment when numbers are high.[77][78] External parasites include ischnoceran feather lice, although these are not found on the bird's head.[79]

Botulism, acquired by eating infected fish, can lead to paralysis and drowning. Aspergillosis is another cause of emaciation and death.[80] Outbreaks sometimes lead to thousands of deaths.[44]

Status and conservation

[edit]

Since 1998, the common loon has been rated as a species of least concern on the IUCN Red List of Endangered Species. This is because it has a large range – more than 20,000 km2 (7,700 sq mi) – and because it has a stable population trend that does not warrant a vulnerable rating. It also has a large population size of 612,000 to 640,000 individuals. The estimated breeding population ranges from 1,400 to 2,600 mature individuals in Europe.[1] Over half of the breeding population in North America is found in Ontario with 97,000 territorial pairs, and in Quebec with 50,000 territorial pairs. About 2,400 individuals occur in each of the maritime provinces of Canada—Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. British Columbia accounts for 25,000 territorial pairs. In far northern Canada, about 50,000 territorial pairs are known to occur, and 12,500 to 15,000 territorial pairs occur in the Prairie Provinces of Alberta, Manitoba, and Saskatchewan. In the United States, the largest breeding population is present in Alaska with 3,600 to 6,000 territorial pairs. The U.S. Great Lakes region has 5,900 to 7,200 territorial pairs which accounts for over half of the breeding population in the United States. There are about 100 territorial pairs in the northwestern U.S. states of Washington, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming. About 2,250 territorial pairs are found in New England and New York. In winter, 3,500 to 4,500 individuals are found in the United Kingdom, and even fewer individuals are found in the western European coastline and in Iceland. Along the Pacific Coast, about 184,000 to 189,000 adults and 31,000 to 32,000 juveniles are found, and along the Atlantic Coast, 423,000 to 446,000 adults and 72,000 to 76,000 juveniles are found.[18]

The common loon is listed under Appendix II of the Convention on the Conservation of Migratory Species, and in Article I under the European Union (EU) Birds Directive.[1] It is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) is applied.[81] In Europe it appears in 20 Important Bird Areas (IBAs), including Ireland, Svalbard, mainland Norway, Iceland, Spain, and the United Kingdom. It is also a listed species in 83 Special Protection Areas in the EU Natura 2000 network.[1] The USDA National Forest Service has designated the common loon a species of special status, and in the upper Great Lake regions of the Huron-Manistee, Ottawa, and Hiawatha national forests as a regional forester sensitive species.[82]

Threats to status and conservation

[edit]

Effects of mercury and acid rain pollution on health and brood productivity

[edit]

The common loon is a key indicator of mercury deposition in aquatic environments due to its position at the top of the food chain.[83] The main contributors to elevated mercury concentrations in aquatic environments are coal burning power plants, waste incineration, and metal production.[84] Although environmental mercury (Hg) is naturally occurring, methylmercury (CH3Hg+, sometimes written as MeHg+) is a biologically toxic form that accumulates throughout aquatic environments in the northeastern United States.[85] Methylmercury, a neurotoxin, has been shown to have a wide range of behavioral, reproductive, and survival effects on the common loon.[86] Previous research has found a correlation between mercury levels and pH, with more acidic aquatic environments being at the highest risk for elevated methylmercury concentrations.[87] Once mercury enters the water, it is taken up by fish and spread throughout the food chain.[84] Resulting from this transmission of mercury, there is a significant positive correlation between mercury levels in fish and mercury levels in male, female, and chick blood of common loons; consequently, an increase in mercury concentration in the blood of common loons and fish was seen with a decrease in local aquatic pH.[88] Although there have been reductions in recent years in acidifying emissions, there has been limited biological recovery in these lakes most likely due to climate change.[89] Research has shown that warmer summer temperatures can inhibit reestablishment of cold-water fish species in acidified lakes and droughts brought on by increased summer temperatures can further acidify lakes.[89]

Although the common loon is able to decrease their methylmercury levels by molting and laying eggs, continued consumption of fish with raised methylmercury levels prevents these mechanisms from effectively lowering methylmercury levels.[86] Mercury concentrations have been shown to vary by the sex and age of common loons. Male common loons were found to contain the highest blood mercury concentration likely due to the fact that they tend to consume bigger fish with higher mercury concentrations.[90] Females contained the second highest blood mercury concentration with differences between the males likely being due to the fact that females can expel mercury into the eggs they lay.[88] Juveniles had the lowest blood mercury concentration.[91] Scientists found that the data from juveniles helped to best indicate the local mercury availability as they are fed exclusively from their natal territory.[88]

Elevated levels of mercury have been associated with changes in foraging and brooding behavior among adult common loons, especially in higher concentrations.[91] Studies have found that elevated levels of methylmercury are associated with lethargy and decreased time spent foraging in adult common loons.[83] A different study carried out in the Adirondack Mountains found that elevated levels of methylmercury are associated with reduced diving frequency in adult common loons.[92] One study found that brood productivity was reduced by half when female blood mercury levels exceeded 4.3 μg/g and productivity completely failed when female blood mercury levels exceeded 8.6 μg/g. These results are related to fish mercury levels of 0.21 μg/g and 0.41 μg/g, respectively.[91] As mercury levels and pH are correlated, scientists have found that brood success decreases with decreasing pH such that environments with a pH at around 4.5 exhibited reproductive success below a calculated positive growth rate threshold.[89] An association has also been observed between elevated blood methylmercury levels and aberrant incubation patterns.[83] Adult common loons with high levels of methylmercury were found to spend less time incubating and in the nest, increasing the risks of predation and the eggs overheating/overcooling.[83] Together, the effects of heightened methylmercury levels on parenting behaviors may contribute to lower chick survival rates. One study in Maine and New Hampshire found that high levels of methylmercury in parents are associated with a significant decrease in the number of fledged young, with common loons in the highest risk group producing 41% fewer fledged young than common loons with low levels of methylmercury.[83]

Mercury deposition in the Adirondack Mountains

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The common loons of the Adirondack Mountains are particularly affected by methylmercury as the acidity of the lakes provides an environment conducive to converting environmental mercury to methylmercury.[85] One study found that 21% of the male Adirondack common loon and 8% of the female Adirondacks common loon sampled were at high risk for detrimental impacts such as behavioral and reproductive abnormalities.[85] In the Adirondacks, bioaccumulation factors for methylmercury were found to increase up the food chain, leaving common loons at the highest risk for detrimental effects from methylmercury.[85] Spatial analysis indicates that the highest aquatic mercury concentrations are found in the southwestern portion of the Adirondacks, an area with lakes heavily affected by acid rain.[87] Organizations such as the Adirondack Loon Center and the Adirondack Cooperative Loon Program spearhead loon conservation efforts in the Adirondacks by performing research, engaging the public, and informing public policy.[86]

Breeding range decline

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The common loon's breeding range has moved northward, the species breeding as far south as Iowa a century ago.[93] It too is adversely affected by acid rain and pollution, as well as lead poisoning from fishing sinkers (especially those that are about the size of the grit stones they ingest[94]) and mercury contamination from industrial waste.[95] Heavy metals such as mercury may be partially removed through biological processes such as excretion or deposition in feathers, but their adverse effects are magnified through concentration of the toxic elements in organs such as the liver. Eggs shells may also contain metal contaminants,[96] leading to low reproductive productivity. High levels of heavy metals are linked to loons being in poor condition,[97] males being affected more because they eat larger fish.[44]

The common loon has also faced a decline in breeding range due to hunting, predation, and water-level fluctuations, or flooding. Some environmentalists attempt to increase nesting success by mitigating the effects of some of these threats, namely terrestrial predation and water-level fluctuations, through the deployment of rafts in the loon's breeding territories.[98] In addition, artificial floating nesting platforms have been provided for the common loon in some lakes to reduce the impact of changing water levels due to dams and other human activities.[99] The common loon abandons lakes that fail to provide suitable nesting habitat due to shoreline development. It is endangered by personal water-craft and powerboats that may drown newly born chicks, wash eggs away, or swamp nests.[93] It is still considered an "injured" species in Alaska as a result of the Exxon Valdez oil spill.[82]

Lead poisoning

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In a 2003 survey of New England dead loons, lead poisoning from fishing weights accounted for about half of the deaths, and other human factors directly caused the death of 52% of the observed 522 loons.[100]

In culture

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Cassell's book of birds, ca 1875

The common loon appears on Canadian currency, including the one-dollar "loonie" coin and the previous series of $20 bills.[101] It is the provincial bird of Ontario.[102] It was designated the state bird of the U.S. state of Minnesota in 1961,[103] and also appears on the Minnesota State Quarter.[104]

Folklore

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The voice and appearance of the common loon has made it prominent in several Native American tales. These include an Ojibwe story of a loon that created the world,[105] and a Mi'kmaq saga describing Kwee-moo, the loon who was a special messenger of Glooscap (Glu-skap), the tribal hero.[106] The tale of the loon's necklace was handed down in many versions among Pacific Coast peoples.[107] The Delaware in the east of North America and the Buryats of Siberia also had creation stories involving the loon.[108]

Folk names for the common loon include "big loon", "call-up-a-storm", "greenhead", "hell-diver", "walloon", "black-billed loon", "guinea duck", "imber diver", "ring-necked loon",[109] and "ember-goose".[110] An old colloquial name from New England was call-up-a-storm, as its noisy cries supposedly foretold stormy weather.[111] Some old Scottish names such as arran hawk and carara are corruptions of old Scottish Gaelic onomatopoeic names representing the bird's call; others, like bishop and ember goose, were used to avoid older names for this sometimes ill-omened bird.[112]

The common loon was eaten in the Scottish Islands from the Neolithic until the eighteenth century, and its thick layer of fat beneath the skin was used as a cure for sciatica.[108]

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The bird is central to the plot of the children's novel Great Northern? by Arthur Ransome (in which it is referred to throughout as "great northern diver", with the then current scientific name Colymbus immer). The story is set in the Outer Hebrides, where the main characters—a group of children on holiday—notice a pair of divers apparently nesting there. Checking their bird book, they believe that these are great northern divers. However, these have not previously been seen to nest in northern Scotland, and so they ask for help from an ornithologist. He confirms that these birds are indeed the great northern; unfortunately, it soon transpires that he does not wish merely to observe, but wants to steal the eggs and add them to his collection; and to do this, he must first kill the birds. Published in 1947, the story is one where the conservationists are the eventual victors over the egg collector, at a time when the latter hobby was not widely considered to be harmful.[113][114]

Major League Soccer club Minnesota United FC uses the loon in its crest and nickname, as well as a mascot.[115]

Minor League Baseball team Great Lakes Loons, located in Midland, Michigan also uses the loon in its logo and name, as well as a mascot.[116]

Films

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The wailing call of the loon is widely used in film and television to evoke wilderness and suspense,[117] and is referenced in songs such as "Old Devil Moon" ("wanna laugh like a loon").[108]

Loons are featured prominently in the 1981 film On Golden Pond.[118] Its distinctive sound also appeared in Conan the Barbarian, Out of Africa, Platoon, Guinevere, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban, Rick and Morty, Watchmen, Godzilla, Kubo and the Two Strings, Avengers: Infinity War, Pet Sematary, 1917 and Avengers: Endgame, among others.[119][120][121]

In the 2016 Pixar movie Finding Dory, a somewhat bedraggled and dimwitted loon named Becky is persuaded to use a bucket to help two of the main characters, Nemo and Marlin, get into a marine life institute where the titular Dory is trapped.[122]

Notes

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References

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Sources

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia

The common loon (Gavia immer) is a large in the family Gaviidae, measuring 66–91 cm in length with a of 104–131 cm and weighing 2.5–6.1 kg. It features a thick, pointed bill, red eyes, and that transitions from black head with white underparts and a distinctive necklace-like collar in breeding to grayish tones in winter. Adapted for aquatic life with dense bones aiding dives and legs set far back for efficiency, it pursues small underwater but struggles on land, requiring long runways for takeoff.
Breeding on remote northern lakes larger than 24 hectares with islands, coves, and abundant , the common loon prefers clear waters in boreal forests across , , and the northern United States, including and . It migrates to coastal marine habitats and large southern lakes for winter, often solitary while feeding but forming loose flocks during migration. Known for its far-carrying , tremolos, and wails that evoke solitude, the communicates territory and distress through vocalizations most active during breeding. The common loon symbolizes northern wildness and is designated the state bird of . Monogamous pairs defend territories and lay 1–3 eggs (typically 2) on shore nests, with incubation lasting about 29 days and chicks fledging after 2–3 months under involving substantial provisioning. Diet consists primarily of supplemented by , captured in pursuits up to several meters deep. While globally populations remain stable and classified as least concern, regional declines occur due to mercury impairing chick survival, lead ingestion from , habitat from shoreline development, and reduced water clarity from climate-driven algal growth. Conservation measures include lead tackle bans and monitoring programs in key breeding areas.

Taxonomy

Classification and nomenclature

The common loon (Gavia immer) belongs to the family Gaviidae, which comprises the loons or divers, and the order , a small avian order containing only this family. Its full taxonomic classification is as follows: Kingdom Animalia, phylum Chordata, class Aves, order , family Gaviidae, genus Gavia, species G. immer. The binomial name Gavia immer was first described by Danish zoologist Morten Thrane Brünnich in 1764, originally under the Colymbus. The name Gavia derives from the Latin term for a , historically applied to certain diving waterbirds. The specific epithet immer originates from the Swedish word immer, referring to the bird's dark, ash-like plumage, or from Icelandic himbrimi, an onomatopoeic term mimicking its calls. Earlier synonyms include Colymbus glacialis, Colymbus hyemalis, Colymbus imber, and Colymbus lumme, reflecting historical placements in the now-defunct genus Colymbus before the recognition of Gaviidae as distinct from grebes (Podicipedidae). In , it is commonly called the common , while in it is known as the great northern diver, highlighting regional differences in tied to its size and vocalizations relative to other loon species. Folk names such as "hell-diver" and "call-up-a-storm" stem from its deep diving behavior and eerie calls, documented in early accounts.

Phylogeny and genomics

The common loon (Gavia immer) belongs to the monotypic family Gaviidae within the order , which comprises five extant species in the Gavia and represents one of the earliest diverging lineages among extant birds, with a record extending to the . Molecular phylogenetic analyses place G. immer as sister to the (G. adamsii), with this pair forming a distinct from the smaller G. pacifica, G. arctica, and G. stellata, the latter two often resolved as sisters. These relationships are supported by mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences, challenging earlier morphology-based hypotheses that emphasized vocal or skeletal similarities across species. A draft genome assembly of G. immer was produced in 2018 using Illumina short-read sequencing (100 bp paired-end reads with 8 kb inserts) from a female specimen, yielding 5,237,924 contigs totaling 767 Mb with a contig N50 of 814 and of approximately 45.7%. identified 14,169 protein-coding genes, representing about 80.7% completeness relative to the (Gallus gallus) genome. Comparative analyses with genomes of the (G. stellata), Adelie penguin (Pygoscelis adeliae), , northern fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis), and rock pigeon (Columba livia) revealed positive selection in 164 genes shared with G. stellata, enriched for functions in muscle development, immunoglobulin production, binding, and ATP metabolism—traits linked to the loon's adaptations for (up to 60 m), long-distance migration, and across freshwater breeding and marine wintering habitats. Subsequent genomic tools, including a genome-wide SNP panel derived from range-wide sampling, have enabled population genetic studies to assess connectivity, , and threats like mercury contamination in breeding populations.

Description

Physical characteristics

The common loon (Gavia immer) is a large, heavy-bodied with a streamlined form adapted for aquatic life. Adults measure 66 to 91 cm in length, possess a wingspan of 104 to 131 cm, and weigh 2.5 to 6.1 kg, with males averaging slightly larger than females. The body sits low in the water due to its dense bone structure and muscular build, which enhance diving efficiency but limit terrestrial mobility. The head features piercing red eyes and a thick, straight, pointed black bill specialized for grasping slippery prey such as . Legs are positioned far back on the body, providing powerful propulsion via large, lobed toes connected by full webbing, though this placement hinders walking on land, resulting in a characteristic upright waddle. Wings are relatively short and robust, suited for underwater "flying" during dives that can exceed 60 meters in depth. The overall skeletal and muscular adaptations prioritize control and thrust generation in water over aerial or terrestrial agility.

Plumage variation and molt

The common loon exhibits distinct seasonal plumage variations, with breeding adults displaying a striking black head and neck featuring a greenish, purplish, or bluish iridescent sheen, a blackish or blackish-gray back adorned with white spots, white underparts, and piercing red eyes; the bill is black, occasionally pale-tipped, and the upper fore-neck bears white "necklaces." In contrast, non-breeding (winter) adults transition to a duller brownish-gray overall appearance, with a dark gray-brown head and neck, brownish rump feathers, a white throat, white encircling the eyes with pale eyelids, and chocolate-brown eyes lacking the red hue of breeding . Juveniles resemble winter adults but feature a scalloped pattern on the back due to retained natal down or juvenile feathers, with gradual replacement over the first year; sexes show no notable dimorphism across ages. The loon's molt follows a biannual cycle aligned with its migratory life history, comprising a prebasic molt initiating in late summer on breeding grounds—primarily replacing body contour feathers into basic (winter) while retaining to enable southward migration—and a subsequent complete prealternate molt in late winter or spring for breeding acquisition. The definitive prebasic molt, occurring primarily January through March on wintering grounds, is catastrophic, involving simultaneous replacement of all 10 primaries, 23–24 secondaries (including 4–5 tertials), and 18–20 tail rectrices, rendering adults flightless for several weeks due to their high and heavy body mass, which precludes sequential feather loss without risking prolonged incapacity. This strategy minimizes total flightless duration compared to staggered molting, as supported by observations of synchronized feather renewal in heavy waterbirds; prealternate molts are partial, focusing on head, , and body feathers, often completing en route or upon arrival at breeding sites by May. First-cycle birds undergo additional formative molts, achieving definitive alternate typically after the third prebasic or fourth prealternate cycle, with variations in timing influenced by breeding success and latitude—earlier in southern ranges. No significant geographic variants are documented, though intensity may vary individually.

Distribution and migration

Breeding range

The common loon (Gavia immer) breeds primarily across northern , encompassing , most of from the Territory eastward to , and portions of the northern United States including states such as Washington, , , , , New York, , , , and scattered sites in and . Its breeding distribution favors large, oligotrophic lakes within boreal forests and edges, where pairs defend territories averaging 0.24 to 0.81 square kilometers. Outside , nesting is limited to and , with small populations in these regions. Breeding pairs arrive at northern sites from late to early , depending on and ice melt, with nests typically built on vegetated islands or shallow shores to minimize predation risk. The southern extent of the breeding range has contracted northward over the past century, with historical records extending to but current reproduction rare south of the and northern Rockies due to , , and human disturbance. In the , breeding populations are estimated at around 12,000 pairs, concentrated in (over 4,000 pairs) and , while Canadian numbers exceed 100,000 pairs across provinces like and . These distributions reflect adaptations to fish-rich, low-disturbance aquatic systems essential for chick survival.

Wintering range

The common loon (Gavia immer) winters predominantly in marine and estuarine habitats along the coasts of , shifting from its northern freshwater breeding grounds to avoid ice cover. Populations breeding in the and typically migrate to coastal waters of the Atlantic Ocean, ranging from southern southward to the , including bays and sounds such as and areas off the and . Western breeding populations favor Pacific coastal waters extending from southward into , while central birds may utilize Gulf Coast estuaries. This distribution reflects a preference for sheltered, ice-free nearshore environments with depths generally under 20 meters, where loons forage on and avoid highly turbid inshore zones within 5–15 km of the shoreline. Radiotelemetry studies indicate site fidelity and regional specificity in wintering areas, with adults from breeding sites in and wintering along the Maine coast approximately 152–239 km from natal lakes, while those from New York's concentrate in . Inland wintering is rare but occurs on large, ice-free freshwater bodies like southern reservoirs or rivers during migration transitions, though the majority (>90%) occupy saltwater habitats by mid-winter. These patterns align with banding recoveries and align with broader surveys showing concentrations in productive coastal shelf waters supporting abundant prey.

Migration patterns

The common loon (Gavia immer) exhibits distinct seasonal migrations between its northern freshwater breeding grounds and southern marine wintering areas, primarily along North American coasts. Adults typically initiate southward migration from interior breeding lakes in late August to early September, with movement continuing until lake freeze-up in October or November, gathering on larger pre-migratory staging lakes during September and October before departing. Most adults undertake non-stop flights from breeding or nearby lakes (within 15 km) directly to coastal wintering sites, covering distances up to 670 miles in a single day as documented in one tracked individual. Migration routes vary by breeding population: loons from eastern , including and the Maritime provinces, primarily head to the Atlantic coast from Newfoundland to the ; central populations may utilize both Atlantic and coasts; while western breeders, particularly from and the , migrate to Pacific coastal waters extending to . Along coastal pathways, loons travel singly or in small flocks, contrasting with larger aggregations on inland staging areas. Spring northward migration occurs from March to June, with arrivals on breeding grounds remarkably synchronous across the range, typically in to May depending on and ice melt. Juveniles exhibit delayed migration patterns, often departing wintering sites in the or similar areas during their first spring to reach natal regions in the or , reflecting influences. Satellite telemetry studies confirm these routes, highlighting direct overwater flights in fall and potential overland segments in spring for some winterers reversing to northern interiors.

Habitat and ecology

Preferred habitats

The common loon selects oligotrophic lakes for breeding, favoring those larger than 24 hectares with high , low nutrient enrichment, and abundant small to support efficient underwater foraging via visual pursuit. These lakes typically feature irregular shorelines forming protected coves, numerous small islands or emergent vegetation mats, and minimal human development to reduce disturbance and predation risks. Nesting occurs on elevated, sparsely vegetated sites such as gravelly islands, rocky outcrops, or floating bog mats in shallow nearshore waters, often 1-2 meters deep, allowing quick escape to water if threatened. Territorial pairs defend sections of larger lakes or clusters of smaller ones (4-100 hectares total), prioritizing habitats with both deep zones and shallow nursery areas for raising young. Water clarity exceeding 4 meters visibility is critical for detecting prey, and loons avoid eutrophic or polluted waters that diminish availability or increase . In non-breeding seasons, common loons shift to coastal marine habitats, preferring sheltered bays, estuaries, and nearshore waters with clear visibility for hunting, primarily along the Atlantic Coast, , and to lesser extents the Pacific. They select sites with depths allowing dives of 10-20 meters, avoiding highly turbid or ice-covered areas, though some remain on large unfrozen inland lakes in milder regions.

Foraging behavior and diet

The common loon (Gavia immer) is predominantly piscivorous, with fish accounting for approximately 80% of its diet by biomass during the breeding season on freshwater lakes. Preferred prey includes small- to medium-sized fish such as (Perca flavescens), pumpkinseeds (Lepomis gibbosus), (Lepomis macrochirus), and sunfishes (Centrarchidae family), typically measuring up to 26 cm in length. Invertebrates supplement the diet, including crustaceans (e.g., ), , leeches, and occasionally mollusks or amphibians, comprising a higher proportion in juveniles or on fish-poor lakes where loons shift to facultative predation on benthic . Quantitative analyses of stomach contents from breeding adults show in about 60% of samples and crustaceans in 47%, though exact proportions vary by lake productivity and prey availability. Foraging occurs almost exclusively by in clear, shallow littoral zones of oligotrophic or mesotrophic lakes during breeding, where loons visually pursue prey using keen underwater eyesight adapted for low-light conditions. Loons propel themselves underwater with powerful feet positioned far back on the body and partially webbed for efficient paddling, supplemented by wing beats for maneuvering, achieving pursuit speeds sufficient to capture evasive . Dive durations on breeding lakes average 20–40 seconds for shallow pursuits (1–10 m depths), though longer submergences exceeding 2 minutes occur on deeper profiles or during winter in marine habitats, where benthic targets species like (Clupea harengus), (Sprattus sprattus), sculpins (Cottidae), and (Gadus morhua). Mean dive times in coastal wintering areas reach 104–111 seconds, with maximum depths recorded to 60 m, indicating adaptations for offshore benthic prey despite energetic costs. Loons avoid turbid waters, as reduced visibility impairs visual , leading to lower provisioning rates for chicks on such lakes. Dietary intake supports high metabolic demands, with near-fledging juveniles consuming about 22% of body weight daily in , while adults may ingest roughly 27 kg (60 lbs) monthly during peak breeding. On naturally fishless lakes, loons compensate by increasing consumption, though this yields lower energetic returns and correlates with reduced chick growth rates. is diurnal and solitary, with adults making repeated short dives from anchored positions, minimizing surface transit time to conserve energy. In winter, loons exploit coastal estuaries and nearshore zones, shifting to larger pelagic or , but maintain similar dive tactics despite deeper profiles. Chicks rely on parental provisioning of smaller prey items, transitioning to independent piscivory by fledging.

Interspecific interactions

Common loons exhibit aggressive interspecific interactions primarily with other waterbirds during the breeding season, often to defend territories and nests from perceived threats. These behaviors include underwater attacks on ducklings and adults, which can result in injury or death, as observed in northern where loons harassed and killed waterfowl, potentially disrupting their foraging and breeding activities. Specific instances involve loons targeting (Mergus merganser) young by ambushing from below the surface on oligotrophic lakes, as well as fatal attacks on female redheads (Aythya americana) via abdominal wounds leading to internal hemorrhage. Such aggression extends to species like mallards (Anas platyrhynchos) and ring-necked ducks ( collaris), where loons pursue and threaten adults accompanying broods, reflecting a territorial strategy rather than consistent predation for sustenance. In non-breeding marine habitats, common loons engage in less antagonistic interactions, participating in multi-species feeding associations (MSFAs) as both initiators and joiners alongside other piscivorous birds and predators. Observations in southeast Alaskan waters during summer revealed loons coordinating with species such as Pacific loons (Gavia pacifica) and potentially seabirds or dolphins to exploit schooling , enhancing efficiency through collective disturbance of prey. Interspecific persists into winter, with reports of loons displacing or attacking other waterfowl in coastal areas, though less frequently documented than breeding-season . Competition with other piscivores for food resources appears limited, as loons select lakes with low densities of alternative predators, minimizing overlap; however, indirect effects from shared prey depletion may occur in high-density breeding areas. Rare cooperative or anomalous behaviors, such as misdirected adoption of orphaned ducklings by loon pairs, have been noted but do not represent typical interactions.

Reproduction and life history

Breeding biology

Common loons (Gavia immer) initiate breeding on northern freshwater lakes in spring, with males typically arriving first in April or May to establish territories through vocalizations including the distinctive yodel call. Females arrive days to weeks later, and pairs form monogamous bonds averaging five years in duration, though to breeding territories exceeds to specific mates. Pairs defend territories aggressively against intruders of the same using calls and displays, maintaining exclusive access to areas essential for chick survival. Courtship involves synchronized circular swimming and mutual diving, reinforcing pair bonds before nest . The male chooses a sheltered location near deep , such as the leeward side of an or a protected , to minimize predation risk and facilitate rapid escape. Both sexes then construct a simple mound nest from aquatic vegetation like sedges and marsh grasses, measuring approximately 22 inches (56 cm) in diameter, over a period of about one week in late May or early June. Nests are reused in subsequent seasons when possible, reflecting strong site tenacity. The female deposits one to two eggs per , typically olive-brown with dark splotches and measuring 3.5 inches (8.9 cm) long by 2.2 inches (5.6 cm) wide; clutches of three eggs occur rarely and may result from dumping by intruding females. Incubation commences upon laying the first egg and lasts 26 to 29 days, shared equally by both parents who alternate shifts at intervals, often turning eggs during exchanges conducted on or near the nest. Loons produce only one brood annually, constrained by the demands of prolonged post-hatching care. Nesting success varies with factors like water levels and disturbance, but high incubation constancy above 97% correlates with higher hatching rates in monitored populations.

Parental investment and chick rearing

Common loons display biparental care, with males and females sharing incubation of the typical of one to two eggs equally, lasting 26-29 days on average. Incubation begins after the first egg is laid, often delaying full commitment until the second egg to synchronize . Newly hatched chicks are semiprecocial, covered in sooty black down with white underparts, capable of walking upright and entering water within hours to swim buoyantly behind parents. Both parents feed chicks primarily small procured by diving in shallow nearshore areas, with males typically providing greater post-hatching care. Parents aggressively defend chicks, especially during the first four weeks when predation risk from conspecifics is highest, adjusting intensity based on chick age, size, and vulnerability. Chicks often ride on an adult's back for protection, warmth, and transport, a persisting into the fledging phase of 10-12 weeks. This obligatory biparental investment precludes renesting and a second brood, committing adults to the until chicks and gain .

Longevity and mortality factors

Common loons (Gavia immer) are long-lived birds, with maximum recorded lifespans in the wild reaching 35 years for a banded and 32 years for a male, based on ongoing monitoring from territorial studies in regions like 's Seney National Wildlife Refuge. A banded in was confirmed alive at 29 years and 10 months in 2016, highlighting the species' potential for extended under favorable conditions. However, annual adult apparent survival rates average 77% (95% CI: 0.48–0.93), reflecting cumulative mortality that prevents most individuals from attaining maximum ages. Survival to breeding age (around 3–5 years) is lower, estimated at 53% from banding data across multiple populations. Mortality factors differ markedly by life stage. In immature loons, fungal respiratory infections account for 20% of deaths, followed by trauma at 18%, often linked to environmental hazards during dispersal. Adult mortality is dominated by anthropogenic sources, with from ingested identified as the primary cause in breeding populations, contributing to up to 52% of examined deaths in areas like between 1990 and 2016. Trauma, including boat propeller strikes (30 cases in one study), shooting, and unspecified blunt injuries, causes 22% of overall fatalities, underscoring vulnerabilities during foraging and migration. Bioaccumulated mercury from aquatic food webs further elevates mortality risk, correlating with reduced survival in contaminated habitats across and , where elevated levels impair neurological function and reproductive viability. Parasitic burdens, such as intestinal trematodes, compound these effects in malnourished individuals, with loons in poor condition showing higher parasite loads and renal mercury concentrations in Maritime assessments. Natural predation on chicks and eggs contributes to early-life mortality, though adults face minimal predation due to their size and defensive behaviors.

Predation and parasitism

Natural predators

The eggs and chicks of the common loon (Gavia immer) are vulnerable to a range of avian and mammalian predators, including (Haliaeetus leucocephalus), (Corvus corax), (Corvus brachyrhynchos), (such as ring-billed gulls, Larus delawarensis), raccoons (Procyon lotor), (Mephitis mephitis), foxes (e.g., , Vulpes vulpes), (Neovison vison), river otters ( canadensis), coyotes ( latrans), and weasels. Predation rates on nests and young have increased in regions with recovering populations, which opportunistically target exposed eggs and small chicks unable to dive effectively. Aquatic predators like (Esox lucius) and snapping turtles ( serpentina) also pose risks to newly hatched chicks. Adult common loons experience low predation pressure due to their size, aggressive defense behaviors, and proficiency in evasion, with bald eagles being the primary documented predator of adults, though such events are infrequent and often involve defensive confrontations where loons may inflict injuries or even kill the eagle. Loons mitigate predation risks through selection, preferring islands and remote lake sites for nesting to reduce access by ground-based mammals, and by vigilant parental guarding, including alarm calls and physical attacks on intruders. Despite these adaptations, nest predation remains a key limiter of in fragmented habitats.

Parasitic threats

Common loons (Gavia immer) are host to a diverse array of helminth parasites, primarily acquired through their piscivorous diet. Necropsy surveys of 104 sick or dead loons from wintering grounds in revealed 48 helminth species, including 31 trematodes, 5 cestodes, 11 nematodes, and 1 acanthocephalan, with trematodes being the most prevalent group. In contrast, 23 apparently healthy loons from the same area harbored 23 helminth species: 13 trematodes, 4 cestodes, 3 nematodes, and 3 acanthocephalans, indicating that while infections are common, elevated burdens may correlate with debilitated condition. Notable trematode genera include Cryptogonimus, Aphallus, and Sphaeridiotrema, often residing in the intestine and potentially contributing to or when intensities are high. Nematodes such as Splendidofilaria fallisensis have been documented in tissues, including fascia of the legs and breast, with potential vectors like black flies (Simulium spp.) facilitating transmission between waterfowl and loons. Acanthocephalans and cestodes, though less dominant, complete their life cycles via intermediate hosts, mirroring the loon's foraging . These metazoan parasites generally exert sublethal effects in healthy adults but exacerbate mortality in juveniles or compromised birds, as evidenced by higher trematode loads in emaciated individuals from Maritime . An emerging protozoan threat is (Plasmodium spp.), historically absent in common loons but now documented with increasing frequency and lethality. In 2017, a dead loon from Lake Umbagog, , exhibited Plasmodium infection confirmed via and PCR, with and indicative of acute disease. Subsequent surveys identified the same parasite lineage in multiple northern U.S. cases, suggesting southward vector expansion—possibly mosquitoes—enabling spillover from other birds amid warming climates. This pathogen bursts erythrocytes and sequesters in tissues, leading to and organ failure, posing a novel population-level risk to a species previously refractory due to geographic isolation.

Population status and threats

Historical population changes and hunting impacts

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, common loon (Gavia immer) populations across North America underwent substantial declines, largely attributable to unregulated sport hunting and persecution as perceived competitors for sport fish. Hunters targeted loons for their plumage, which was used in millinery, and due to widespread animosity toward piscivorous birds believed to deplete fish stocks, leading to near-extirpation in several regions. For instance, in Washington State, records document that loons were nearly eliminated between 1881 and 1979 through intensive shooting practices. Similarly, in Massachusetts, the species was virtually absent by the late 1800s, with hunting as a primary driver alongside habitat alterations. These hunting pressures exacerbated vulnerabilities inherent to the loon's , including low reproductive rates and site fidelity, which limited rapid population recovery. In the Adirondacks of New York, local traditions of hunting loons for food and sport contributed to localized crashes, with edible qualities noted but populations slow to rebound without intervention. Quantitative estimates of pre-decline abundances are scarce, but anecdotal and early survey indicate breeding pairs were once far more numerous in southern breeding fringes, such as and the , before retreating northward. In , mid-20th-century shooting persisted despite emerging conservation awareness, as loons were erroneously viewed as threats to success. The enactment of protective legislation, notably the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918, prohibited of loons and facilitated gradual population recovery by curbing direct mortality. Post-protection rebounds were evident in core breeding areas like the northern U.S. and , though peripheral populations remained depressed into the mid- due to lagged effects and compounding factors like . By the late , North American breeding populations had stabilized at over 200,000 individuals, underscoring 's reversible impact when addressed through legal bans, though historical legacies persist in fragmented southern distributions. This recovery trajectory highlights the causal role of anthropogenic harvest in driving declines, distinct from density-dependent factors, as evidenced by rapid increases following harvest cessation in monitored lakes. The global of the common loon (Gavia immer) is estimated at 500,000–700,000 individuals and classified as Least Concern by the IUCN, with an overall stable trend that does not approach vulnerability thresholds. Including post-migration young-of-the-year, the total can reach 764,000–795,000 birds. hosts approximately 94% of the global breeding , totaling around 580,000 individuals, with a moderate increase observed since via Breeding Bird Survey data, remaining within long-term goal ranges. Regional variations show stability or modest gains in core Canadian breeding areas, such as , which supports 37% of the , though has declined since , particularly on low-pH lakes in western regions. In the United States, the accounts for 5,900–7,200 territorial pairs, comprising over half of national breeding numbers, with ongoing monitoring indicating localized fluctuations. Northern states exhibit mixed trends: reported higher and chick counts in 2024 compared to 2023 across surveyed lakes; reached an all-time high in numbers by mid-2025 but with reduced chick survival rates; New Hampshire's 2024 documented 359 breeding pairs, a preliminary decline of 89 pairs from prior years; and Minnesota's focal territories showed sustained monitoring of 98 sites in 2024 without broad declines. In the , the population hosted 60% of regional loons in 2023, with strong . These patterns reflect habitat-specific factors like lake acidification and contaminant loads influencing amid broader recovery from historical lows.

Anthropogenic influences

Mercury contamination from atmospheric deposition of industrial emissions bioaccumulates in aquatic food webs, resulting in elevated levels in common loons that reduce by impairing hormone regulation, incubation behavior, and chick survival. In the Adirondack region of New York, a 2012 analysis found mercury burdens sufficient to cause reproductive harm in 21% of sampled adult males and 11% of females, with affected pairs producing fewer fledglings. Loons in areas with high mercury exposure show lethargy, wing asymmetry, and up to 50% lower fledging rates compared to unexposed populations. Lead poisoning, primarily from of discarded sinkers and hooks during , causes and is the leading documented cause of adult mortality in regions like , where it accounts for over 50% of examined deaths since the 1980s. A 2018 study confirmed elevated lead biomarkers in s from contaminated sites, linking tackle to neurological damage, emaciation, and organ failure within days of exposure. In , lead alongside mercury contributed to near-extirpation of loons by the mid-20th century, though populations have partially recovered with tackle regulations. Acid rain from sulfur dioxide emissions acidifies lakes, depleting fish populations and indirectly reducing loon prey availability, with breeding pairs on affected waters showing up to 30% lower productivity since the 1980s in . This stressor exacerbates mercury in sediments, compounding toxicity in lakes with minimal buffering capacity. Shoreline development and recreational disturbances, including and water level fluctuations from or drawdowns, fragment nesting and increase chick energy expenditure, leading to higher starvation rates; in , such human-induced nest failures affect 20-40% of attempts annually. assessments identify watercraft proximity as the primary threat in protected areas, causing loons to abandon territories or lose chicks to .

Natural stressors and ecosystem resilience

Severe weather events, particularly storms and cold fronts encountered during post-breeding molt when common loons are flightless and confined to coastal waters, induce by limiting opportunities and prompting shifts to higher-salinity prey, which elevates physiological stress from osmotic imbalance. Such conditions have triggered mass die-offs, including an estimated 13,000 individuals along coasts in 1983. Poor weather similarly constrains during breeding, reducing energy intake and potentially lowering reproductive output, though quantitative impacts on nest success vary by lake size and prey density. Avian botulism type E, resulting from Clostridium botulinum neurotoxin bioaccumulation in fish prey under natural conditions such as low water levels and warm temperatures, causes paralysis and mortality during fall migration staging on the Great Lakes. Outbreaks led to over 12,000 confirmed common loon deaths between 2000 and 2006, primarily on Lake Erie, highlighting vulnerability to episodic food web disruptions independent of human influence. Non-parasitic fungal respiratory infections contribute to immature mortality, accounting for 20% of diagnosed cases in New England necropsies from 1987 to 2000, often exacerbated by nutritional deficits during early independence. Natural fluctuations in lake prey abundance, driven by seasonal productivity cycles and algal dynamics, periodically challenge chick rearing by reducing parental provisioning rates; for instance, lower densities in oligotrophic lakes correlate with delayed fledging in observational studies, though loons compensate via increased dive frequency up to 60 meters depth. Ecosystem resilience in common loon populations manifests through high annual adult survival rates of 85-95%, permitting demographic recovery from losses via sustained breeding efforts on 1-2 chicks per pair. Migratory flexibility across expansive breeding ranges (over 20 million lakes in ) and wintering areas buffers against localized natural perturbations, as individuals redistribute to favorable grounds; genomic adaptations for efficient visual in low-light aquatic environments further enhance persistence amid variable and prey distributions. In undisturbed systems, populations maintain stability despite interannual weather variability, underscoring inherent robustness tied to top-predator trophic positioning and to resilient habitats.

Conservation efforts

Regulatory measures and protections

The common loon (Gavia immer) is protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA) of 1918, which prohibits the take, possession, or commercialization of migratory birds, their eggs, parts, or nests without prior authorization from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS). The species is explicitly listed among birds covered by the MBTA, ensuring federal oversight of activities that could harm populations during breeding, migration, or wintering phases. In , analogous protections are provided by the Migratory Birds Convention Act (MBCA) of 1994, which safeguards migratory birds from hunting, harm, or disturbance, with the common loon designated as "not at risk" nationally by the Committee on the Status of Endangered Wildlife in (COSEWIC) as of 2021. Hunting of common loons is prohibited under both U.S. and Canadian federal laws, with no open seasons or bag limits established due to their protected status as migratory birds. Violations of the MBTA can result in fines up to $15,000 and imprisonment, emphasizing enforcement against intentional harassment or incidental harm. State-level regulations supplement federal protections; for instance, in New York, the common loon is classified as a species of special concern, subjecting it to additional monitoring and safeguards under state environmental laws. Targeted measures address anthropogenic threats like from ingested . In , regulations since 2014 prohibit lead sinkers in loon habitats such as the Quabbin and Wachusett Reservoirs to mitigate risks. enacted a phased ban in 2023 on the sale and use of small painted lead jigs (one or less, or two and a half inches or less) ingestible by s, aiming to reduce mortality from lead accumulation. These restrictions reflect linking lead tackle to elevated loon mortality rates, prioritizing non-toxic alternatives without broadly curtailing activities.

Monitoring and intervention programs

Monitoring programs for the common loon (Gavia immer) primarily involve volunteer-based surveys, aerial counts, and territory-specific observations to track breeding pairs, chick productivity, and population trends across North American lake habitats. In , the state Department of Natural Resources coordinates the Minnesota Loon Monitoring Program, where hundreds of volunteers survey over 600 lakes annually across six index areas to assess loon occupancy and reproductive success. Similarly, Maine Audubon's Maine Loon Project conducts an Annual Loon Count and supports the Maine Loon Restoration Project, combining ground surveys with public reporting to monitor nesting outcomes on inland lakes. These efforts reveal regional variations, such as stable or increasing pairs in areas with reduced acid deposition but declines linked to contaminants like mercury. Banding and marking initiatives provide long-term data on individual movements, survival, and site fidelity. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), in cooperation with authorities, monitored 98 focal loon territories and 37 additional sites across 53 lakes in , incorporating banding to evaluate restoration outcomes amid threats like . The Institute's Program employs color-banding and resighting across the U.S. and to quantify annual return rates and dispersal patterns, aiding threat assessment for contaminants and predation. In the Adirondacks, the Adirondack Center for Loon Conservation tracks hundreds of color-banded loons on over 100 lakes each breeding season, correlating banding data with nesting success metrics. The Preservation Committee in bands loons on regional lakes to monitor territorial dynamics and chick fledging rates. Intervention programs emphasize habitat enhancement and threat mitigation to bolster reproduction. Vermont's Loon Conservation Project deploys artificial nesting rafts and collaborates with landowners on shoreline protections, contributing to population recovery from 300 pairs in the 1980s to over 400 by the 2010s through combined monitoring via LoonCount and LoonMonitor protocols. In response to lead poisoning from ingested tackle, programs like the Adirondack Center's Lead Fishing Tackle initiative promote non-lead alternatives and recycling, while fishing line retrieval efforts reduce entanglement risks during rescues of orphaned or injured chicks. The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife supports predator guards and nesting platforms on select lakes to counter mammalian predation, integrated with population monitoring. These targeted actions, often evaluated through pre- and post-intervention chick survival data, demonstrate causal links to improved fledging rates where implemented consistently.

Effectiveness and ongoing debates

Conservation efforts for the common loon (Gavia immer) have demonstrated partial success in stabilizing North American populations, which remain overall stable despite regional variations, largely due to historical protections against hunting and targeted interventions like lead fishing tackle bans. In states with lead bans, such as Vermont's 2007 prohibition, loon mortalities from lead poisoning decreased threefold over the following decade, while Maine's 2013 ban correlated with a 57% reduction in such deaths by 2023. These measures address a primary adult mortality factor, as lead ingestion accounts for up to 49% of necropsied loon deaths during peak fishing seasons in unregulated areas. Citizen science monitoring programs have enhanced effectiveness by improving data collection on breeding success and threats, enabling adaptive management like lake habitat prioritization for restoration. However, mercury contamination persists as a chronic threat, with emission controls showing limited impact: adult loon blood mercury levels stabilized post-regulations but did not decline, while juveniles and eggs exhibited modest improvements. Productivity has declined in regions like from 1981 to 2018, particularly on low-pH lakes farther west, underscoring incomplete mitigation of legacies and ongoing . Cryptic population declines, driven by reduced floater survival rather than territorial losses, highlight gaps in traditional monitoring. Ongoing debates center on prioritization and regulatory scope. Proponents of expanded lead bans argue for population-level benefits, countering opposition from interests who question broad prohibitions despite of localized . Some researchers emphasize lead's immediacy—addressable via state-level actions—over mercury, which demands transboundary emission reductions and faces exacerbation from climate-driven increases in contamination. Emerging concerns include offshore wind development and water level fluctuations, prompting discussions on integrating ecosystem resilience into plans versus focusing on contaminants. These debates underscore the need for -based scaling of interventions, as global least-concern status masks vulnerabilities in breeding subpopulations.

Cultural and symbolic role

Indigenous and historical significance

In various Indigenous cultures of , the common loon (Gavia immer) holds symbolic importance as a representation of the untamed and spiritual depth, often invoked in myths and rituals to embody tranquility, foresight, and connection to the unseen world. Among Algonquian-speaking peoples of the and , loons are regarded as divine messengers capable of traversing between earthly and spiritual realms, with their distinctive calls interpreted as communications from ancestors or omens of harmony and peace. Specific tribal traditions further illustrate this reverence; for instance, the (Chippewa) recognize a Clan, where the bird serves as a signifying leadership, generosity, and the ability to dive into profound , as reflected in creation stories where the loon aids in world formation by retrieving from underwater depths. In Secwepemc lore from interior , loons symbolize power and transformation, appearing in narratives as helpers to shamans who summon their spirits for guidance or to predict weather events like rain through their haunting wails. Similarly, Micmac and other eastern woodland tribes recount legends explaining the loon's physical traits, such as its land-walking awkwardness or red eyes, as results of ancient sacrifices or rivalries with other animals, underscoring themes of resilience and adaptation in passed orally across generations. and stories portray loons as kin-like figures with keen perceptiveness, their cries evoking familial bonds or warnings tied to lake ecosystems central to subsistence hunting and fishing. Historically, European accounts from the onward documented Indigenous uses of imagery in art and , though often filtered through colonial lenses that emphasized over cultural context; for example, early ethnographers noted loons' roles in predicting natural events or as spirit allies in shamanic practices among and boreal peoples, predating widespread settler impacts on loon populations through alteration. These traditions persist in contemporary Indigenous , but archaeological evidence of loon bones in pre-contact sites suggests practical significance as well, including occasional for or feathers used in , though overhunting was rare due to the bird's totemic status prohibiting wanton killing.

Modern cultural depictions

The distinctive tremolo and wail calls of the common loon (Gavia immer) have permeated modern , particularly in (EDM), hip-hop, and pop genres, where they serve as sampled sound effects to evoke isolation, wilderness, or eeriness. Producers and DJs frequently incorporate these vocalizations for atmospheric depth, with examples including tracks by , , , , and . This usage stems from the calls' haunting, otherworldly quality, which aligns with the bird's in remote northern lakes, though it has led to the loon's sound becoming somewhat divorced from its natural context in global audio production. In film and television, loon calls often function as auditory shorthand for untamed northern landscapes or psychological tension, appearing in sound design for scenes in productions such as (1986), (2019 remake), (2019), and episodes of . This convention persists despite the bird's limited geographic range, reflecting a broader cultural association of its voice with and the sublime, as documented in analyses of media soundscapes. Designated Minnesota's state bird on April 25, 1961, the common loon symbolizes regional identity and in contemporary American iconography, appearing in state materials, plates, and conservation that highlights its dependence on mercury-free waters. In , its image adorns provincial emblems in and features in wildlife art exhibitions, reinforcing its role as an emblem of aquatic wilderness amid ongoing habitat pressures. Modern visual artists, such as mixed-media creator e bond, have reinterpreted the loon through layered paper and ink techniques to explore themes of avian adaptation and ecological fragility.

References

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