Dissection of a Pigeon: Phylum
Chordata (Class Aves), 2018
The domestic pigeon (Columba livia) (also
called the rock dove or city pigeon) was originally found in Europe, Northern Africa,
and India. Early settlers introduced it into the eastern United States as a
domestic bird in the 1600s. Since then, it has expanded throughout the United
States to Alaska, across southern Canada, and south into South America. Pigeons
originally lived in high places—cliffs, ledges, and caves near the sea—that
provided them with safety. Over time they have adapted to roosting and nesting
on windowsills, roofs, eaves, steeples, and other man-made structures. Pigeons
typically have a gray body with iridescent feathers around their neck, a broad
black band on their tail, and salmon-colored feet. Breeders have created color
variations, so the body color may also be white, tan, black, or a combination
of several colors. Pigeons have a strutting walk and their call is a long,
drawn-out coo that can be heard quite easily. When they take
off, their wing-tips touch, making a characteristic clicking sound.
Domestic pigeons mainly eat seeds and grains. Pigeons also eat insects, fruit,
and vegetation, and scavenge food people provide for them—intentionally or
unintentionally. While young birds of other species are fed a high-protein diet
of insects, young pigeons are fed “pigeon milk”—a milky-white fatty substance
regurgitated from both parents’ crops. Unlike most birds that must tip their
heads back to swallow water, pigeons can drink by sucking water directly from a
puddle or other water source. Domestic pigeons mate for life unless separated
by death or accident. Females usually lay two cream-colored eggs in a nest
loosely constructed from twigs, feathers, and debris. Both male and female
incubate the eggs, which hatch after 18 days. The young are independent at four
to five weeks of age. Pigeons can raise four to five broods annually. Under
optimal conditions, new eggs are laid even before the previous clutch has left
the nest.