Order: Ciconiiformes
Family: Phoenicopteridae
Genus and Species: Phoenicopterus ruber
The Zoo exhibits flamingos from the Caribbean region. They are sometimes called American, Caribbean, or Greater Flamingo.
Size
Flamingos are usually 42 inches long
from the tip of the head to the tip of the tail, and
are as tall as five feet. They weigh five to six pounds,
and have a wingspan of 55 inches.
Distribution and Habitat
The flamingo lives in Central and South
America, the West Indies, and the Galapagos Islands,
in coastal salt lagoons, saltpans, and other brackish
or saltwater shallows.
Diet
Flamingos eat algae, mollusks, larvae chrysalides
of brine-flies and brine-shrimps, which give them their
pink color.
Reproduction
Pairs of males and females make mud-mound nests,
and incubate only one egg for about 30 days. Chicks
leave the nest after ten days, and join a group of other
chicks, called a crèche, watched by a few adults.
Conservation
Flamingo populations remain relatively
stable, despite loss of habitat due to human development.