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Difference between revisions of "Little Egret" - BirdForum Opus

(Picture of Juvenile. Taxonomy & Behaviour expanded expanded. References updated)
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:*Widespread [[Eurasia]], east and [[South Africa]]
 
:*Widespread [[Eurasia]], east and [[South Africa]]
 
*''E. g. nigripes'':
 
*''E. g. nigripes'':
:*[[Java]] and [[Philippines]] to [[]]New Guinea
+
:*[[Java]] and [[Philippines]] to [[New Guinea]]
 
*''E. g. immaculata'':
 
*''E. g. immaculata'':
 
:*Northern and eastern [[Australia]]; occasional [[New Zealand]]
 
:*Northern and eastern [[Australia]]; occasional [[New Zealand]]

Revision as of 23:00, 26 October 2014

Photo by alibenn
Beidaihe, China
Egretta garzetta

Identification

A small white heron with black legs and bill, and yellow feet. In breeding plumage it has two long slender plumes from the back of the head and plumes on the back and breast. Most of the year, the lores are bluish-grey, but in pre-breeding display they become bright yellow, orange, or even flushed bright red in excited birds. In winter plumage, the plumes are lost. Juveniles differ in having no plumes, and drabber bare part colours, with dingy dark grey-green legs with more extensive dull blackish-yellow on the lower legs, a dark grey bill with a paler base, and dull grey lores.

Variation

Photo by Cristian_Mihai
Chiajna (Ilfov), Romania, May 2008

Most areas with Little Egret contains birds with yellow feet, but the tropical east Asian subspecies E. g. nigripes has black feet with just yellow soles.

Similar species

On Little Egret, the upper edge of the bare facial skin is straigt from eye to bill, while in Chinese Egret that line goes down before going back up[2]. See also Snowy Egret for comparison of that species with Little Egret[3].

Distribution

From western and southern Europe, though southern Asia to Korea, Japan, and Indonesia to New Guinea, as well in northern and eastern Australia, and New Zealand.

Juvenile
Photo by ChrisKten
London, UK, June 2014

In recent years it has increased substantially in western Europe, with breeding first recorded in Great Britain in 1996, rising to around 100 pairs in 2001 and 900 pairs in 2012. First breeding in Ireland, Austria and Poland took place in 1997. This is largely a recolonisation, as the species was abundant in Britain in mediaeval times, being popular on the menu of large banquets; it became extinct in this region by the 16th century due to a combination of over-hunting and colder winters in the "Little Ice Age"[4]. In Britain Little Egrets can now be seen on estuaries and lowland pools almost anywhere except for central and northern Scotland. The largest numbers, often several hundred, occur from Cornwall to West Sussex, with numbers reaching a peak in autumn when many immature birds arrive on post-breeding dispersal from further south.

In north Africa occurs from the Cape Verde Islands and coastal Mauritania to Tunisia and throughout the Nile Delta and valley. It is also widespread south of the Sahara, from Senegal to Somalia and south to South Africa.

Most European and west Asian birds migrate to sub-Saharan Africa but others winter around the Mediterranean, and small numbers as far north as southern Scotland. Post-breeding dispersal takes many birds north of main breeding range in late summer and autumn.

Recorded as a vagrant to most European countries out of usual range north and east to Iceland and the Faroe Islands, Norway, Latvia and Belarus, also recorded in the Azores, Madeira and Canary Islands (first breeding in 1995).

It has also recently (since 1994) colonised the Western Hemisphere, with a breeding colony on Barbados, and has occurred with several reports from Trinidad to Martinique and Puerto Rico, and with vagrants north through the eastern United States and Canada with records in Delaware, New Brunswick, Maine, Massachusetts, and Newfoundland.

Taxonomy

Subspecies

  • E. g. garzetta:
  • E. g. nigripes:
  • E. g. immaculata:

Some authors formerly considered the Western Reef Egret, Pacific Reef Egret and Dimorphic Egret to be subspecies of this species[5].

Habitat

Slow-flowing rivers, shallow lakes and flooded fields, also on brackish lagoons, estuaries and along shorelines.

Behaviour

Forms communal roosts where birds from a large area gather at dusk.

Breeding

Breeds colonially in trees near water. They lay from 4 to 6 eggs hatching after 3 weeks. They fledge at 4 weeks old spending a further 4 weeks in the care of the adults.

Diet

They have a wide, varied diet; mostly consisting of small fish, but they also include amphibians, insects and small mammals.

Vocalisation

<flashmp3>Egretta garzetta (song).mp3</flashmp3>
Listen in an external program

References

  1. Clements, J. F., T. S. Schulenberg, M. J. Iliff, D. Roberson, T. A. Fredericks, B. L. Sullivan, and C. L. Wood. 2014. The eBird/Clements checklist of birds of the world: Version 6.9., with updates to August 2014. Downloaded from http://www.birds.cornell.edu/clementschecklist/download/
  2. Birdforum thread discussing id of Little and Chinese Egrets.
  3. An identification essay comparing Little and Snowy Egrets.
  4. Bourne, W. R. P. (2003). Fred Stubbs, Egrets, Brewes and climatic change. British Birds 96: 332–339.
  5. Del Hoyo, J, A Elliot, and J Sargatal, eds. 1992. Handbook of the Birds of the World. Volume 1: Ostrich to Ducks. Barcelona: Lynx Edicions. ISBN 978-8487334108
  6. British Trust for Ornithology
  7. ArKive

Recommended Citation

External Links


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