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'Mystery tern' (Sterna/Chlidonia sp.) at Waterloo, Trinidad, 17 March 2002. Photos © by Floyd Hayes,
shot with two different cameras at different angles. Note the black
bill, dark facial patch, prominent carpal bar (probably indicative of
immature), dusky primaries, red legs (partially obscured by mud), dark
outer web of outermost retrix, and small size in comparison with
Laughing Gulls (Larus atricilla) in bottom photo. To see the opinions of others, click here.
Clearly
this an odd bird whose identity cannot be ascertained with certainty.
There appears to be an emerging consensus that the bird was most likely
a Common Tern (S. hirundo) with an unusually pale hindcrown. Several respondents suggested it might be a Whiskered Tern (C. leucopterus),
but the bill seems too large, the carpal bar too prominent, the wing
coverts between the carpal bar and secondaries too contrastingly white,
and the outer web of the outermost rectrix too dark. Other candidate
species suggested include Gull-billed Tern (S. nilotica; bill too thin, legs wrong colour), Sandwich Tern (S. sandvicensis; shape and leg colour wrong), Roseate Tern (S. dougallii; carpal bar too prominent and outer web of outermost rectrix too dark), Forster's Tern (S. forsteri; carpal bar too prominent and outer web of outermost rectrix too dark) and White-winged Tern (C. leucopterus; bill too large).
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