When amateur Chilliwack photographer William Snow was out with his camera recently to get some wildlife shots, he saw something he had never seen before.
It was a Canada Goose, one that almost looked like a ghost.
91ƵWhen I saw it I could not believe my eyes,91Ƶ Snow said. 91ƵI thought the crow was the only one but from the info it is rare.91Ƶ
The crow Snow referred to is a white crow well-known among Chilliwack bird watchers that has been spotted for years, mostly in the Sardis Park area.
91Ƶ RELATED:
Chilliwack's resident leucistic crow that lives in or near Sardis Park, photographed on April 7, 2020. (William Snow photo) |
Like the resident crow, the pale Canada Goose that Snow photographed is the colour it is because of an abnormal genetic condition called leucism (pronounced LUKE-ism) that affects birds, mammals and reptiles. The result is pale colouring either in patches or, as in the case of Snow91Ƶs goose and the local crow, overall the feathers.
Leucism is often mistaken with albinism, but it is not the same. A leucistic bird still has normal eye and beak colour, and the discolouration may be only in patches. Albinism means an animal has no pigment anywhere at all.
91ƵAlbino birds are distinctly different,91Ƶ according to Michael Stein in a report about leucism. 91ƵAlbinos are entirely white with pink eyes and skin. Albinism has a different origin, too: problems with an enzyme called tyrosinase (pronounced ty-RAHS-in-ayse). Problems with tyrosinase lead to problems making melanin, the pigment that gives skin, feathers, and eyes their colour.91Ƶ
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