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Willow ptarmigan

The willow ptarmigan (/ˈtɑːrmɪɡən/) (Lagopus lagopus) is a bird in the grouse subfamily Tetraoninae of the pheasant family Phasianidae. It is also known as the willow grouse and in Ireland and Britain, where the subspecies L. l. scotica was previously considered to be a separate species, as the red grouse. It breeds in birch and other forests and moorlands in northern Europe, the tundra of Scandinavia, Siberia, Alaska and Canada, in particular in the provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador and Quebec. It is the state bird of Alaska. In the summer the birds are largely brown, with dappled plumage, but in the winter they are white with some black feathers in their tails (British populations do not adopt a winter plumage). The species has remained little changed from the bird that roamed the tundra during the Pleistocene. Nesting takes place in the spring when clutches of four to ten eggs are laid in a scrape on the ground. The chicks are precocial and soon leave the nest. While they are young, both parents play a part in caring for them. The chicks eat insects and young plant growth while the adults are completely herbivorous, eating leaves, flowers, buds, seeds and berries during the summer and largely subsisting on the buds and twigs of willow and other dwarf shrubs and trees during the winter.

L. l. alascensis (, 1926) - Alaska

Swarth

L. l. alba (Gmelin & JF, 1789) - Northern

Canada

L. l. alexandrae (Grinnell, 1909) - and British Columbia

Alaska

L. l. alleni (Stejneger, 1884) -

Newfoundland

L. l. brevirostris (Hesse, 1912) - and Sayan Mountains

Altai Mountains

L. l. koreni (Thayer & Bangs, 1914) - to Kamchatka peninsula

Siberia

L. l. kozlowae (, 1931) - northern Mongolia and southern Siberia

Portenko

L. l. lagopus (, 1758) - Scandinavia, Finland, and northern Russia

Linnaeus

L. l. leucoptera (Taverner, 1932) - Northernmost and its Arctic islands

Canada

L. l. maior (Lorenz T, 1904) - north and southwest Siberia

Kazakhstan

L. l. okadai (Momiyama, 1928) -

Sakhalin Island

L. l. rossica (Serebrovski, 1926) - and central Russia

Baltic states

L. l. scotica (Latham, 1787) - Britain and

Ireland

L. l. sserebrowsky (Domaniewski, 1933) - Northeastern to southeast Siberia and northeastern China

Mongolia

L. l. ungavus (, 1911) - Northeastern Canada

Riley

L. l. variegata (, 1936) - Trondheim, Norway

Salomonsen

Distribution in Europe[2]

Distribution in Europe[2]

Distribution in North America[2]

Distribution in North America[2]

The willow ptarmigan has a circum-boreal distribution. It is native to Canada and the United States, China, Mongolia, the Russian Federation, Kazakhstan, the Czech Republic, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Germany, the United Kingdom and Ireland.[1] It primarily occupies subalpine and subarctic habitats such as sparse pine and birch forests, thickets with willow and alder trees, heather moors, tundra and mountain slopes. In the winter, females and sub-adults may move to lower altitudes and seek shelter in valleys or in more densely vegetated areas, but adult males usually remain in the subalpine region.[16] The red grouse is common on heather-clad moorland across the north and west of Great Britain and in localised areas of Ireland.[6]

Cold adaptations[edit]

The willow ptarmigan has several behavioral and physiological adaptations that help it survive the long Arctic winter, such as large pectoral muscles that aid in the process of shivering. Researchers have found that these pectoral muscles grow quickly during the first few days of the ptarmigan's life, meaning that the ptarmigan chicks go from having no thermoregulatory ability at hatch to being able to maintain their normal body temperature for hours at 10 °C when they are two weeks old. The rapid increase in pectoralis size is caused by increases in muscle fiber diameters (hypertrophy), and cold exposure is not necessary for this muscle development to occur.[21] Ptarmigan also have thick plumage with feather barbules that contain air-filled cavities,[22] contributing to a low heat loss, which aids in thermoregulation while the bird is roosting in burrows in the snow. Ptarmigan can withstand the severe cold because the ambient temperature in the sheltered microclimate of their snow burrows typically exceeds their lower critical temperature.[22]

Status[edit]

Widespread and not uncommon in its remote habitat, the willow ptarmigan is classified as a species of "Least Concern" by the IUCN. This is because, even if, as is suspected, numbers are declining slightly, it has a very wide range with a total population estimated at forty million individuals.[1]

was originally going to be named "ptarmigan" in 1902, but town founders could not agree on how to spell it.[25]

Chicken, Alaska

Game & Wildlife Conservation Trust Red Grouse Page

RSPB Red Grouse Page

Video clip of male Willow Ptarmigan in winter

[usurped] (for Belarus, Canada, Finland, Ireland, United States) with worldwide RangeMap

Stamps: Willow Ptarmigan

on the Internet Bird Collection

Willow Ptarmigan videos

VIREO

Willow Ptarmigan photo gallery