The
Greater Crested Tern,
Crested Tern, or
Swift Tern (
Thalasseus bergii, syn.
Sterna bergii - see Bridge
et al., 2005), is a seabird of the tern family Sternidae.
It breeds in tropical and subtropical coastal parts of the Old World from South Africa around the Indian Ocean to the western Pacific and Australia. All populations disperse widely when not breeding.
The Greater Crested Tern breeds in dense colonies on coasts andislands. It nests in a ground scrape and lays two eggs. Nestingbehaviour is very similar to that of Sandwich Terns, with predator avoidance by mutual protection in large colonies.
Like all
Thalasseus terns, the Greater Crested Ternfeeds by plunge diving for fish, usually from saline environments. Itnormally dives directly, and not from the "stepped-hover" favoured bythe Artic Tern. The offering of fish by the male to the female is part of the courtship display.
This is a large tern, 45-48 cm long with a 100 cm wingspan. Sexesare similar; the summer adult has a black cap with a long crest, anarrow white forehead band, black legs and a long sharp cold yellowbill. The back and upperwings, are medium grey with a paler rump andthe underparts are white. The primary flight feathers darken during thesummer.
In winter, the head becomes more extensively white and the crest ispeppered with white. Juvenile birds have heavily marked upperparts andwings, with patterning of brown, white and some grey. The closed wingsin particular appear to have dark bars. The head and underparts arelike the winter adult. The call is a loud grating
keraak noise like a gruff Sandwich Tern.
The Greater Crested Tern has four geographical races, differing mainly in the shade of the upperparts and bill colour.
- T. b. velox: breeding on the northern Indian Ocean coasts and wintering in East Africa north of the equator. Largest and darkest subspecies.
- T. b. thalassina: breeding western Indian Ocean. Smallest and palest form.
- T. b. bergii: breeding South Africa. Dark grey above and slightly larger than thalassina.
- T. b. cristata: breeding Eastern Indian Ocean, Australia and Pacific. Like bergii, with tail, rump and back concolorous.
This species has to be distinguished from the closely related Lesser Crested Tern, which is smaller, orange-billed and usually has paler upperparts.
T. b. bergii,
T. b. thalassinus and
T. b. velox are among the taxa to which the
Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies.