GREAT BLUE HERON (Ardea herodias)

Description

Measure 39–52 inches (99–132 cm) with a wingspan of 5 feet 10 inches (1.8 m). A common large, mainly greyish heron with a pale or yellowish bill. Often mistaken for a sand hill crane, but flies with its neck folded, not extended like that of a crane. An all-white form in southern Florida called a great white heron, differs from great egret in being larger, with greenish-yellow rather than black legs.

Habitat

Lakes, ponds, rivers, and marshes.

Nesting

Three to seven pale greenish-blue eggs placed on a shallow platform of sticks lined with finer material, usually in a tree but sometimes on the ground or concealed in a reed bed. Nests in colonies.

Range

Breeds locally from coastal Alaska, south-central Canada, and Nova Scotia south to Mexico and West Indies. Winters as far north as southern Alaska, central United States, and southern New England. Also in Galapagos Islands.

Voice

A harsh squawk.

Comments

An adaptable bird whose large size enables it to feed on a variety of prey, from large fish and frogs to mice, small birds, and insects. The great blue has one of the widest ranges of any North American heron. This wide choice of food enables it to remain farther north during the winter than other species, wherever there is open water, although such lingering birds may fall victim to severe weather. Most great blues nest in colonies in tall trees; their presence is often unsuspected until the leaves fall and the groups of saucer-shaped nests are exposed to view. In late summer, young herons disperse widely and may be encountered at small ponds, in mountain waters, or even in backyard pools – wherever fish are plentiful.