Abstract
Abstract Consumption of fine-textured soils by birds is common in South and Central America and some parts of Southeast Asia. Many bird species eat fine-textured soils to aid in digestion, detoxification, and mineral supplementation, but there are few documented cases of such behavior in North America. Here, I describe the consumption of clay soils from an expansive clay bank in north-central British Columbia, Canada by a Northern Flicker (Colaptes auratus L.) in the autumn of 2015. Texture analysis of soils used by the Flicker and collected from the clay bank indicated the soil texture was 61.84% silt, 38.16% clay, and 0.00% sand, which is similar to soils eaten by tropical birds where geophagy has been recorded. Trace element analysis indicated total concentrations of main elements tested ranged from 9 ppm for boron to nearly 40,000 ppm for iron, while minor elements ranged from below detectable limits for mercury, molybdenum, antimony, selenium, and tin to over 1700 ppm for titanium. Total concentratio...
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