Showing posts with label yellow-crowned night-heron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yellow-crowned night-heron. Show all posts

Thursday, January 4, 2018

Some Florida waders + cute owls

The polar blast continues here in Columbus, Ohio and elsewhere in the Midwest. It's 10 F as I write this, and will drop below zero tomorrow night. It's been frigid for a while - a true winter! - although it is projected to warm significantly next week.

I've been working through photos from a Florida trip of last February - paring the wheat from the chaff, labeling, and archiving. Just looking at all of these Floridian birds makes me feel warmer, and the images bring back memories of basking in balmy Sunshine State weather, often only arm's length from excellent subjects. If you like to photograph birds, it's hard to beat Florida.

All of these, with the exception of the burrowing owls, were shot at either Ding Darling on Sanibel Island, or Gatorland near Orlando. The owls were some of the many that call Cape Coral home.

The drive through Ding Darling produces LOTS of birds, and lots of photo ops. Here, from L to R, is a white ibis, snowy egret, and great egret - studies in elegant whites.

A snowy egret, yellow slippers on display, drops in for a landing.

 Gotta love the wild head of plumes on a snowy egret. I came back from this trip with many thousands of images, thanks to numerous encounters with photogenic beasts such as this.

 A tricolored heron rages through the shallows. This is a hyperactive hunter, chasing prey, flapping wings wildly, and in general acting spastic. Quite a contrast to the much more sedate, studied tactics of a great blue heron.

A goggle-eyed juvenile yellow-crowned night-heron lurks at the edge of some mangroves. It, as should be surmised from the name and huge eyes, does most of its hunting after dark.

As always, click the photo to enlarge. And in this case, admire the amazing cerulean-blue eye of this white ibis.

Two of the many burrowing owls that make Cape Coral home stand sentinel at the entrance to their burrow. This city - either the largest or second-largest of any in Florida by acreage! - harbors a large population of these subterranean nesters, and I've written more about them RIGHT HERE.

Stay warm!

Friday, May 10, 2013

Bexley's famous night-herons


A pair of Yellow-crowned Night-Heron nests adorn massive Sycamore trees overarching Preston Road in Bexley, Ohio, on the east side of Columbus. This species has been nesting in this spot for about eighteen years, and insofar as I am aware, it is the only known breeding "colony" of Yellow-crowned Night-Herons in the state. They are undoubtedly nesting in a few other locales, but pinning down the nests is often not easy.

This is a ritzy neighborhood indeed. Nearly all of the neighbors are well aware of the herons, if only because of all the birders that flock to the neighborhood to pay homage to these special birds. Or, perhaps, they notice the ever-increasing layer of white guano that whitewashes the street below the nests. Ah, a small price to pay in order to host such interesting animals

I made my annual trip to the nests yesterday, and was pleased to see that a pair of birds was back in residence. Their clumsy stick structure is a bit rattier than the surrounding big $$$ homes, but it has done the job well for many years now. There was no sign of another pair, and the other nest remains unused. The active nest is the one in the backdrop in the previous photo.

Yellow-crowned Night-Herons are at the northern cusp of their breeding range in Ohio. A few birds have nested even farther north, such as in Michigan and Minnesota, but for the most part this is as far north as they make it. The species becomes quite common southward, and is easily found in the swamplands and coastal wetlands in the southern U.S, throughout the Caribbean, in much of Central America, and parts of South America.

Oh my, what big eyes you have! The bulging reddish eyes of Yellow-crowned Night-Herons are a major, obvious feature, and serve the animal well on its nocturnal fishing forays. A beautiful little stream, Alum Creek, flows very near to this nesting site, and these birds undoubtedly spend much time in its waters under cover of darkness.


This shot shows the peculiar forward-facing arrangement of night-heron eyes. Actually, most herons have a similar setup. It's as if the bird has a pair of telescopes sighted down the blade of a bayonet. Like a pool shark carefully measuring his shot, a hunting heron draws a bead on prey, and with a brutal thrust of the neck that is quick is a wink, it spears its victim. In the case of Yellow-crowned Night-Herons, the favored prey are crustaceans, and in these parts that means crayfish. Life for the "crawdads" in nearby Alum Creek is perilous indeed.

There was much primping of plumes as the birds set about the task of rehabilitating their nest. The sexes look nearly identical, and I believe the male is the bird on the left, fanning its feathers like a peacock. When nest construction commences, he gathers sticks and offers them to the female, who then carefully places them into the structure. This behavior, apparently, serves to also reinforce their pair bond. That's what I observed yesterday - male passing along sticks, female embedding them in the nest.
 
The male partially fluffs himself into a regal state, and seems to demand that the female pay him some mind. She was busy, though, and had seemingly sent him out on a limb where he couldn't interfere with her important work.
 
It won't be long and eggs will be laid, and before we know it the gangly youngsters will be in the nest. I'll try and make another trip down here at a later stage and share how things are going for this pair.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Yellow-crowned Night-Heron chicks

Photo: Dane Adams

An adult Yellow-crowned Night-Heron, Nyctanassa violacea, stands sentinel in its big sycamore tree in a very suburban Columbus, Ohio neighborhood. Ace photog Dane Adams stopped by the site yesterday and took some outstanding documentary photos of one of Ohio's very few known nesting pairs of these interesting herons.

Photo: Dane Adams

These night-herons have been nesting in their Bexley suburbanscape for many years now, and the nests - I believe there are two, at least there were the last time I made it by - resemble overgrown Mourning Dove nests. The stick platforms have become somewhat larger and bulkier with each passing nesting season, and this one has gained considerable mass since the birds first began to breed at this site. I covered this story a few years ago in more detail, you can read it RIGHT HERE.

Flimsy abode or not, it obviously suffices to support a clutch of night-heron eggs, and later, the gangly offspring. As we can see from Dane's photo, there are four awkward-looking big-billed heronlets in the nest, curiously peering about.

Photo: Dane Adams

The young herons may not be much to look at at this point, but they'll morph into one of our most beautiful waders, at least the males will. Yellow-crowned Night-Heron is an extremely rare bird in Ohio, and is listed as threatened in the state by the Ohio Division of Wildlife. A compelling argument could be made for upgrading the species to endangered. There has been only one other confirmed nesting in the past few years, and a half-dozen possible but unconfirmed reports. They are at the extreme northern limits of the breeding range here; yellow-crowneds become common as one moves southward into the southern states, the Caribbean, and coastal areas (primarily) of Mexico and Central and South America.

It shouldn't be long and these little bulbous-billed wonders will be out and about, fishing for their own crayfish in nearby Alum Creek. Hopefully this nesting site will continue to be used for many years to come.

Thanks, as always, to Dane Adams for freely sharing his work with us.