MORPHOMETRY OF EAGLE SPECIES (FAMILY ACCIPITRIDAE) AT BALI BIRD PARK

Authors

  • Iriani Setyawati Universitas Negeri Manado
  • L.P. Eswaryanti Kusuma Yuni Universitas Udayana
  • Retno Kawuri Universitas Udayana
  • Ni Made Suartini Universitas Udayana
  • Ni Wayan Sudatri Universitas Udayana
  • I Gede Agus Pradana Putra Bali Bird Park

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.53682/ibj.v3i3.5733

Keywords:

Accipitridae, bird show, eagle, mophometry, raptor

Abstract

This study measured the morphometry of raptor species (Family Accipitridae) in Bali Bird Park (BBP) namely Nisaetus cirrhatus (Changeable Hawk Eagle), Elanus caeruleus (Black Winged Kite), Spilornis cheela (Crested Serpent Eagle) and Haliaeetus leucogaster (White Bellied Sea Eagle). Measurements were made with meter tape and caliper on birds that were in their resting period. Raptor at BBP generally rest for 6 months until experience molting before being retrained for 4-5 months, then the birds will be ready to perform bird show for the next 9-12 months. Our measurements obtained the largest bird was Haliaeetus leucogaster with a total body length of 75 cm, wings length 83.5-85 cm, tail length 26 cm, head size (8 cm length and 7 cm width), upper beak (8 cm length and 2.5 cm thick) and lower beak (3 cm length and 1 cm thick), lower limb length (femur 17 cm, tibia 9 cm, metatarsus 11 cm, middle toe 6.5 cm and grip 9 cm). The smallest bird was Elanus caeruleus with a total body length of 33 cm, wing length 39-45 cm, tail length 19 cm, head size (8 cm length, 5.5 cm width), upper beak (2.5 cm length and 0.5 cm thick) and lower beak (1 cm length and 0.3 cm thick), lower limb length (femur 8 cm, tibia 4 cm, metatarsus 5 cm, middle toe 3 cm and grip 5 cm) The morphometry of the species Nisaetus cirrhatus and Spilornis cheela were between the two other bird species.

References

Clark, W. S., Boesman, P., & Marks, J. S. 2019. Changeable Hawk-Eagle (Nisaetus cirrhatus) In: del-Hoyo, J., Elliott, A., Sargatal, J., Christie, D.A., & de-Juana, E. (ed), Handbook of the Birds of the World Alive Lynx Ed. (Barcelona) .

Debus, S.J.S. 2008. Biology and Diet of the White-bellied Sea-Eagle Haliaeetus leucogaster Breeding in Northern Inland New South Wales. Australian Field Ornithology 25: 165-193.

Dennis, T. E., Mclntosh, R.R. & Shaughnessy, P. D. 2011. Effects of Human Disturbance on Productivity of White-Bellied Sea-Eagles (Haliaeetus leucogaster). Emu, 111, 179-185.

https://avibase.bsc-eoc.org/species.jsp?avibaseid=97C47F3E1BA4129A

MacKinnon, J., Phillips, K., & van Ballen, B. 2010. Birds of Sumatra, Jawa, Bali and Kalimantan, RCB-LIPI and Birdlife Indonesia, Bogor.

Partasasmita, R., Iskandar, J., & Malone, N. 2016. Karangwangi people's (South Cianjur, West Java, Indonesia) local knowledge of species, forest utilization and wildlife conservation. Biodiversitas 17: 154-161.

Retnaningtyas, R.W., Hermadhiyanti, W., Rahayu, D.A., & Listyorini, D. 2015. The Identification of the White-Bellied Sea Eagle (Haliaeetus leucogaster) Based on Morphological Characteristics. The 3rd International Conference on Biological Science Volume 2 (2015) 588-591.

Wiwoho, J., Basuki, O.P., & Huda, R. 2007. Laporan Program Pelepasliaran Elang Laut Perut Putih (Haliaeetus leucogaster) di Kawasan Danau Batur. Bali: Pusat Penyelamatan Satwa Bali.

Downloads

Published

2023-01-09

How to Cite

Setyawati, I., Yuni, L. E. K., Kawuri, R., Suartini, N. M., Sudatri, N. W., & Putra, I. G. A. P. (2023). MORPHOMETRY OF EAGLE SPECIES (FAMILY ACCIPITRIDAE) AT BALI BIRD PARK. Indonesian Biodiversity Journal, 3(3), 30-34. https://doi.org/10.53682/ibj.v3i3.5733