Late Sunday afternoon (5 Jan), Patricia Lindsay and I studied a very distinctive dark Brant at Pt Lookout, Nassau County, Long Island. The bird was among a large flock on the flat immediately east of Lido Boulevard, but all the birds were flushed in short order by a dog-walker.

Clearly not an example of the locally abundant subspecies hrota ("Atlantic" or "Pale-bellied"), this bird also differed in multiple respects from Pacific Black Brant (orientalis):

-Its overall dorsal plumage tone was very slightly, if at all, darker than that of accompanying hrota (vs. obviously darker, as in Black Brant)

-Its dark ventral apron extended less far rearward and blended diffusely with its white lower belly (rather than forming an obvious, abrupt dividing line posterior to the legs, as in Black Brant)

-Its ventral neck collar was only slightly bolder than that of adult hrota nearby, lacked well-defined webbing, and was incomplete ventrally (vs. broad and ventrally complete, with bold webbing, as in Black Brant).

Photos showing these features can be seen here:

https://picasaweb.google.com/109808209543611018404/LongIslandMiscellany2014

Birds of this appearance have puzzled ornithologists for more than a century and a half, beginning with a specimen collected in New Jersey in 1846, and continuing with a sparse but consistent accumulation of records from the east coast of North America and elsewhere. Because their appearance is in various ways intermediate between Atlantic Pale-bellied and Pacific Black Brant, they have been suspected as hybrids--although no direct evidence supports this view. Alternatively, these birds' close resemblance to the population breeding in the western Canadian High Arctic, known as Gray-bellied Brant, suggests that they might be vagrants rather than hybrids.

It is a signature feature of this conundrum that the identity of the 1846 NJ specimen is itself controversial. Published by Lawrence as the type of a new taxon, nigricans, it was regarded for a century as the type for Pacific Black Brant, but it was distinguished from that taxon by Delacour and Zimmer (1952). P. A. Buckley and I (2002) documented the congruence among this specimen, other eastern North American records, and Gray-bellied Brant, and proposed that the name nigricans be restricted to Gray-bellied Brant (previously not formally named).

Shai Mitra & Patricia Lindsay
Bay Shore, NY

Delacour and Zimmer (1952): https://sora.unm.edu/node/20044

Three geese resembling Gray-bellied Brant/Lawrence's Brant from Long Island, New York. 2002, Buckley, P.A.; Mitra, S.S. North American Birds, 56: 502 - 507. Abstract available online here: http://pubs.er.usgs.gov/publication/5224228

BNA account (Lewis et al. 2013): http://bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/337/articles/systematics

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