Leach's storm petrel

Leach's storm petrel
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Procellariiformes
Family: Hydrobatidae
Genus: Hydrobates
Species:
H. leucorhous
Binomial name
Hydrobates leucorhous
(Vieillot, 1818)
Subspecies

See text

Synonyms
List
    • Procellaria leucorhoa Vieillot, 1818
    • Procellaria leachii Temminck, 1820
    • Procellaria atlantica Bonaparte, 1824
    • Procellaria bullockii (nomen novum for P. leachii) Fleming, 1828
    • Oceanodroma beali Emerson, 1906
    • Oceanodroma beldingi Emerson, 1906
    • Oceanodroma leucorhoa willetti (=socorroensis?) van Rossem, 1942
    • Cymochorea leucorhoa muriwai Mathews & Hallstrom, 1943

Leach's storm petrel or Leach's petrel (Hydrobates leucorhous) is a small seabird of the tubenose order. It is named after the British zoologist William Elford Leach. The scientific name is derived from Ancient Greek. Hydrobates is from hydōr "water", and batēs "walker", and leucorhous is from leukos, "white" and orrhos, "rump". It was formerly treated in the genus Oceanodroma before that genus was merged into Hydrobates.

It breeds on inaccessible islands in the colder northern areas of the North Atlantic and North Pacific Oceans. Very small numbers also breed in the South Atlantic off the coast of South Africa. It nests in colonies close to the sea in well concealed areas such as rock crevices, shallow burrows, or even logs. It lays a single white egg, which often has a faint ring of purple spots at the large end. This storm petrel is strictly nocturnal at the breeding sites to avoid predation by gulls and skuas, and even avoids coming to land on clear, moonlit nights. The largest colony of Leach's storm petrels can be found on Baccalieu Island off eastern Canada, an ecological reserve with ~1.95 million pairs of the birds at last estimate in 2013. As with European storm petrel, birds breeding at the northern limit of the species' range on the Arctic Circle in Norway have to delay their breeding until autumn to avoid the 24-hour daylight of the high summer.