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Why are flamingos pink?
Feather color varies with species, ranging
from pale pink to crimson or vermilion. Caribbean flamingos have
the brightest coloration: crimson or vermilion. The Chilean
flamingo is pale pink.
A flamingo's pink or reddish feather color
comes from its diet, which is high in alpha and beta-carotene.
People eat beta-carotene when they eat carrots.
What do flamingos eat?
The typical flamingo diet consists of diatoms,
seeds, blue-green alage, crustaceans, and mollusks they filter
out of the water. Using their long legs and partially webbed
feet, flamingos will stamp on the muddy bottom of lagoons to mix
the food particles with the water. Different species of flamingo
have slightly different shaped bills; the different shapes
helping it obtain slightly different types of food. Flamingos
drink fresh water.
How do they get the food out of
the water?
Flamingos use their large beaks to filter
small food items from the water. A flamingo lowers its head into
the water, upside-down. It moves its head from side to side,
collecting the food/water mixture. The spiny, piston-like tongue
acts to pump the water mixture past the toothlike ridges on the
outside of the beak and the lamellae, or finger-like
projections, inside the beak. The lamellae act as strainers to
remove the food particles from the water.
How do flamingos live?
Flamingos live in large groups all year long
called colonies. Tens of thousands of flamingos can live in one
colony! Within a colony, flamingos breed in pairs. Every pair of
flamingos does not breed every year, however. Breeding
Flamingos are able to reproduce by the age of
about six. There is no specific season associated with breeding,
but it seems to be correlated with rain. Nest building may
depend on rainfall and its effect on food supply.
When they are ready to lay their breed, birds
will form pairs. Within the whole colony, groups of birds will
be engaged in courtship displays -, a predictable sequence of
displays including marching and head turning, calling and
preening. Several hundred to several thousand flamingos are all
doing the same behaviors at the same time. This helps to
synchronize breeding within the colony, so that most of the
birds are laying eggs or raising young at the same time.
Nesting
Every flamingo does not nest every year. When
they do nest, they typically lay one large, white egg. The nest
is built of mud, small stones, and feathers on the ground and is
in the shape of a volcano. Mounds can be as high as 30 cm (12
in.). It can take a pair of flamingos up to six weeks to build
their nest. Both parents will take turns incubating the egg for
26 to 31 days
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