Black Tern
Chlidonias niger
A small dark, graceful tern of freshwater marshes and lakes. These birds breed in the upper Midwest, Great Lakes area, and southern Canada while wintering on the northerner coast of South American and the Pacific coast of Mexico. Black terns are readily identified in spring when they are in their brilliant black plumage, and in fall with their buoyant, bouncy and erratic flight with deep wingbeats and mottled black and white plumage.
Description: Compact, with short square tail, broad wings and small black bill. Distinguishable by dark black head and neck in breeding plumage, dark gray upperparts, dark gray underparts and dark red legs and feet. Sexes similar in plumage. Juveniles and nonbreeding birds have dark ear spot and partial cap, pale underparts with dark patch on breast.
Length: 9.75 in.
Wingspan: 23 in.
Weight: 2.3 oz
Voice: Call is a harsh, sharp, complaining keff or keff with a higher pitched kyip
Similar Species: None
Habitat: Frequents freshwater lakes, rivers, and other interior wetlands during spring and fall migration. In winter black terns are largely marine mostly staying within 30 km of land but have been known to venture out further in search of food.
Diet: Insects, spiders, small fish and small mollusks
Nesting and reproduction: Black tern has never been known to nest in Tennessee.
Status in Tennessee: Annual, regular, and locally common across the western half of the state, but can occur in east Tennessee in small numbers.
Dynamic map of Black Tern eBird observations in Tennessee
Fun Facts:
- The Black Tern is very social. It breeds in loose colonies and usually forages, roosts, and migrates in flocks of a few to more than 100 birds, occasionally up to tens of thousands.
Best places to see in Tennessee: Old Hickory Lake (May), Percy Priest Lake (August), Tennessee NWR - Duck River Unit (August), and the Mississippi River (any and all viewing areas) in late April through May and in August.
For more information:
Sources:
Nicholson, C. P. 1997. Atlas of Breeding Birds of Tennessee. Univ. of TN Press, Knoxville, TN.
Paulson, D. 2005. Shorebirds of North America. Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ.
Robinson J. C. 1990. An Annotated Checklist of the Birds of Tennessee. Univ. of TN Press, Knoxville, TN. Sibley, D. A. 2000. The Sibley Guide to Birds. A. A. Knopf, New York, NY.
Consider using the online bird checklist program at eBird to help us understand bird populations and distributions in Tennessee. Click here to see how.