Prehistoric remains indicate that up until 8,000 years ago, the greater roadrunner was found in sparse forests rather than scrubby deserts; only later did it adapt to arid environments. Due to this, along with human transformation of the landscape, it has recently started to move northeast of its normal distribution. Sparse forests can be found in these parts, in an environment similar to the prehistoric North American Southwest.[11][5][12]
Description
The roadrunner is about 52–62 cm (20–24 in) long, has a 43–61 cm (17–24 in) wingspan and weighs 221–538 g (7.8–19.0 oz). It stands around 25–30 cm (9+3⁄4–11+3⁄4 in) tall and is the largest cuckoo of the Americas.[13][14][15] The upper body is mostly brown with black streaks and sometimes pink spots. The neck and upper breast are white or pale brown with dark brown streaks, and the belly is white. A crest of brown feathers sticks up on the head, and a bare patch of orange and blue skin lies behind each eye;[16] the blue is replaced by white in adult males (except the blue adjacent to the eye), and the orange (to the rear) is often hidden by feathers.[5] Males and females have identical plumage. Females are slightly smaller, on average 2 cm (3⁄4 in) shorter and 30 g (1.1 oz) lighter than males. The long stout beak is grayish brown to gray and has a hooked tip. Roadrunners have four toes on each zygodactyl foot; two face forward, and two face backward.[17] The toes are brown in color and have pale gold spots.[5]
Although capable of limited flight, it spends most of its time on the ground, and can run at speeds up to 20 mph (32 km/h).[16] Cases where roadrunners have run as fast as 26 mph (42 km/h) have been reported.[18] This is the fastest running speed clocked for a flying bird, but not nearly as fast as the 40 mph (60 km/h) of the completely flightless and much larger ostrich.[19]
Vocalizations
The vocalizations of the greater roadrunner have seven distinct variants. The most frequent call is a slow and descending sequence of about six low, “cooing” noises, emitted by the male and which is heard at 820 feet (250 m).[20] This call is usually made early in the morning, from a high perch such as a fence post, dead tree or cactus. Females give off a number of up to twenty-two short, low-frequency shrills, resembling coyote squeals, which can be heard 1,000 feet (300 m) away. Both male and female roadrunners emit a series of five or six chatters accompanied by groaning, loud enough to be heard 700 feet (200 m) away. This sound is the roadrunner's most common vocalization during the incubation period and the rearing of chicks.[21]
The greater roadrunner can be found from 200 ft (61 m) below sea level to 7,500 ft (2,300 m), but rarely above 9,800 ft (3,000 m). It occupies arid and semiarid scrubland, with scattered vegetation (typically less than 50% cover) with a height that doesn't exceed 9 ft 10 in (3.00 m).[5]
Behavior
Breeding and nesting
Until a mate is found, the greater roadrunner typically lives a solitary life.[23] The greater roadrunner is monogamous, forming long-term pair bonds.[5] Breeding season begins from mid-March to early September.[24] Courtship behaviors between greater roadrunners is a lengthy process including a combination of chasing, tail wagging, play-fighting, and acoustic signals. Once the chasing stage has passed, male greater roadrunners will present nesting materials or food to the females.[24]
Often males will exchange food to females during the act of copulation. A unique feature of the greater roadrunner is that mated couples will continue their copulation rituals long after the need for egg fertilization. This factor is believed to contribute to the couple's pair bond maintenance.[24] Greater roadrunner couples defend a territory of about 7,500 to 8,600 sq ft (700 to 800 m2) in size.[25][26] The male is more territorial, calling out to warn competitors, and does not hesitate to physically push the intruders out of his territory. Some couples defend the same territory all year long.[26]
Both birds build the nest, with the male collecting the material and the female constructing the nest. The nests are compact platforms of thorny branches lined with grasses, feathers, snakeskin, roots, and other fine material.[5] They are built low in a cactus, bush, or man-made structure; around 40 feet (12 meters) above ground.[24] Greater roadrunners lay three to six eggs, which hatch in 20 days. The chicks fledge in another 18 days. Pairs may occasionally rear a second brood when there is an abundance of food in rainy summers.[5] A young fledge will typically remain with its parents until it is at least 50 days old.[24]
Similarly to some other cuckoos, greater roadrunners occasionally lay their eggs in the nests of other birds, such as the common raven[27] and northern mockingbird.[28]
The greater roadrunner is omnivorous and uses its speed to outrun prey. It feeds mainly on small animals such as insects, spiders (including black widows and tarantulas), centipedes,[30]scorpions, mice, small birds (including hummingbirds), lizards and small snakes, and some plants. Some instances of the greater roadrunner feeding on larger mammals (including bats, ground squirrels, and one juvenile desert cottontail)[31] have been observed. They are opportunistic and are known to feed on eggs and young of other birds[32] as well as carrion.[23] Early pioneer accounts report that when the roadrunner "sees a rattlesnake, it will gather pieces of cactus and put them around the snake, in such manner that escape is impossible".[33]
Thermoregulation
Because of the greater roadrunner's diurnal nature and arid habitat, it has various biological and behavioral adaptations, known as thermoregulation, to reduce dehydration and overheating. During the hot season, it is active mostly from sunrise to mid-morning, and late afternoon to evening. It rests in the shade during the hottest part of the day.[34]Body water may be retained via liquid reabsorption, by the mucous membranes in the cloaca, rectum and caecum. The roadrunner's nasal glands eliminate excess body salts.[35][36]
The greater roadrunner reduces excess heat by the formation of water vapor, released by breathing or through the skin.[37] It sometimes pants in heavy heat to accelerate this action.[38] At night, it reduces its energy expenditure by more than 30 percent, lowering its body temperature from 104 to 93 °F (40 to 34 °C).[39] In the morning, it accelerates heat recovery by sunbathing.[40] In winter, it takes refuge in dense vegetation or among rocks to shelter from cold winds.[5]
The roadrunner frequently sunbathes for warmth. It turns perpendicular to the ground with its back turned towards the sun. Wings apart, the roadrunner ruffles the black feathers on its back and head, exposing its black skin, allowing both skin and feathers to absorb the heat of the sun's rays.[40] Early in the morning, it can stay in this posture for two or three hours.[41] In winter, when the temperatures are around 68 °F (20 °C), roadrunners may warm themselves in the sun several times during the day for more than half an hour at a time.[5]
Locomotion
The greater roadrunner can maintain a speed of 20 mph (32 km/h) over long distances.[42][41] While running, it places its head and tail parallel to the ground and uses its tail as a rudder to help change its direction. It prefers to run in open areas, such as roads, packed trails and dry riverbeds rather than dense vegetation.
The roadrunner less often engages in flight. It hovers from a perch, such as a tree or a human construction. More rarely, it flies short distances of 4 or 5 m (13 or 16 ft) between potential roosts.[5]
Relationship to humans
Some PuebloNative American tribes, including the Hopi, believed the roadrunner provided protection against evil spirits. In Mexico, some said it brought babies, as the white stork was said to in Europe. Some Anglo frontier people believed roadrunners led lost people to trails.[5]
The greater roadrunner is the state bird of New Mexico and, as such, appeared in a 1982 sheet of 20-cent United States stamps showing 50 state birds and flowers.[44]
^ abLarson, Leigh Marian (1930). University of California Press (ed.). Osteology of the California road-runner recent and pleistocene. Vol. 324. Berkeley, California. p. 22. OCLC2951884. University of California publications in zoology{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^ abHarris, Arthur H. et Celinda R. Crews (1983). Southwestern Association of Naturalists (ed.). "Conkling's Roadrunner: A Subspecies of the California Roadrunner?". The Southwestern Naturalist. 28 (4): 407–412. doi:10.2307/3670819. JSTOR3670819.
^Mary C. Carpenter; Jim I. Mead; William H. Baltosser (2003). Southwestern Association of Naturalists (ed.). "Late Pleistocene Roadrunner (Geococcyx) from Kartchner Caverns State Park, Southeastern Arizona". The Southwestern Naturalist. 48: 402–410.
^David W. Steadman; Joaquin Arroyo-Cabrales; Eileen Johnson; A. Fabiola Guzman (1994). Cooper Ornithological Society (ed.). "New Information on the Late Pleistocene Birds from San Josecito Cave, Nuevo León, Mexico". The Condor. 96: 577–589.
^Calder, W. A. (1968). "The Diurnal Activity of the Roadrunner, Geococcyx californianus". The Condor. 70 (1). Oxford University Press (OUP): 84–85. doi:10.2307/1366511. JSTOR1366511. S2CID34032894.
^Hayes, (Judge) Benjamin (1929). P. 132. "Pioneer Notes From the Diaries of Judge Benjamin Hayes 1849-1875." McBride Printing Company, Los Angeles, California.
^Calder, WA (1967). Cooper Ornithological Society (ed.). "The Diurnal Activity of the Roadrunner, Geococcyx californianus". The Condor. 70: 84–85.
^RD Ohmart; TE Chapman; LZ McFarland (1970). University of California Press on behalf of the American Ornithologists Union (ed.). "Water Turnover in Roadrunners under Different Environmental Conditions". The Auk. 87: 787–793.
^RD Ohmart; TE Chapman; LZ McFarland (1972). Pergamon Press (ed.). "Physiological and ecological observations concerning the salt-secreting nasal glands of the Roadrunner". Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology. 43A: 311–316.
^Robert C. Lasiewski; Marvin H. Bernstein; Robert D. Ohmart (1968). Cooper Ornithological Society (ed.). "Cutaneous Water Loss in the Roadrunner and Poor-Will". The Condor. 73: 470–472.
^Ohmart, Robert D. (1973). Cooper Ornithological Society (ed.). "Comments on the Breeding Adaptations of the Roadrunner". The Condor. 75: 140–149.
^Vehrencamp, Sandra L. (1982). Cooper Ornithological Society (ed.). "Body Temperatures of Incubating versus Non-Incubating Roadrunners". The Condor. 84: 203–207.
^ abOhmart, R. D. (1989). "A timid desert creature that appears to be half bird, half reptile". Natural History, American Museum of Natural History. 89: 34–40. ISSN0028-0712.
Whitson, Martha Anne (1971). Field and laboratory investigations of the ethology of courtship and copulation in the greater roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus-Aves, Cuculidae) (Thesis). hdl:11244/3240. OCLC26964120, 26964120ProQuest302509125.
Further reading
Hoese, William; Anticona, Steve; Olmos, Erik; Parent, John; Rutti, Donald; Velasco, Beth (March 2013). "Greater Roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) Kills Juvenile Desert Cottontail (Sylvilagus audubonii)". Southwestern Naturalist. 58 (1): 124–126. doi:10.1894/0038-4909-58.1.124. S2CID86206451.
Montalvo, A. E., Ransom, D., & Lopez, R. R. (2014). Modeling Greater Roadrunners’ (Geococcyx californianus) Habitat Use in West Texas. The Wilson Journal of Ornithology, 126(2), 359–366. http://www.jstor.org/stable/26455981