This black flamingo is one in several million鈥攁nd perhaps, the only one in the world.
On April 8, it was spotted during a flamingo count along a salt lake at the environmental center on the Mediterranean island of Cyprus. This same flamingo may have also been seen in 2014, when a 70-year-old man captured what could be the world鈥檚 鈥渢he one and only black flamingo鈥 on camera, the photographer the Monterey Herald.
Greater Flamingo flocks regularly move long distances, 鈥渟o there's a good chance that this is the same individual that was seen in Israel,鈥 says 爆料公社鈥檚 field editor Kenn Kaufman.
The bird鈥檚 inky feathers are a result of melanism, a genetic condition that produces too much of the pigment 鈥渕elanin,鈥 turning those otherwise pink plumes black during development. The opposite of melanism is albinism, when no melanin is made and the animal is colorless besides a faint hue in the eyes (from red blood vessels). When several types of pigment are partially missing, the result is a patchy coloration known as 鈥攁 few white feathers here, a bleached splotch there. Albino and Leucistic (鈥溾) birds are much more frequent than melanistic birds, says Kaufman, 鈥渁lthough these still affect only a tiny percentage of the populations of most bird species.鈥
Other strange of all-black feathers have been observed in birds from owls to woodpeckers to herons. The condition seems to be most common in a few hawk species, as well as jaegers, and some seabirds, he says. But "I don't know of any other cases of melanism in flamingos."
We have to assume,鈥 says Kaufman, the odds of such 鈥渁 fascinating bird鈥 occurring, 鈥渁re only one in several million鈥攁t least.鈥
Given that fewer than Greater Flamingos exist, it seems this black beauty (okay, the flamingo has a few white rear feathers) is one of a kind.