Home Herons, Egrets, Ibises - CICONIIFORMES Ardeidae Great Blue Heron - Ardea herodias
Great Blue Heron PDF Print E-mail

Great Blue Heron Ardea herodias
L 46" (117 cm) W 72" (183 cm).

Song or calls:
Deep, rough croak.

more images


photo by Phil Swanson

 

Description: Sexes similar. Flies with long neck coiled back onto itself; slow wingbeats. Adult mostly medium gray, with narrow plumes over back and breast; crown and face white, with broad black band extending into long, narrow plumes from nape; stripe down foreneck expands into black and white breast; black belly; rufous thighs; bill large, yellowish, daggerlike; long, grayish legs. Juvenile lacks plumes, mostly grayish with rufous feather fringes; cap blackish; throat white; upper mandible black.

Bird Map
Habitat: Migrants are found along all water areas supporting a fish population and having shallows for foraging. Nesting usually occurs in colonies among groves of tall trees.

Where in Nebraska: Common regular spring and fall migrant statewide; local breeder in the western and central portions of the state; uncommon in the east. Locally rare but regular winter visiter. The heron may be seen along most rivers, streams, farm ponds, lakes or reservoirs that contain a fish population. Tall cottonwood trees are often used for nesting colonies although some active colonies have been documented in low-growing hackberry trees in the Sandhills and on abandoned tranmission poles along the Platte River.

Fun Facts: Great Blue Herons catch much of their prey by spearing fish with their long sharp bill and sometimes a heron has been known to choke to death trying to eat a fish that was too big.


(click image for larger view)

 

Our Sponsors


Nebraska Environmental  Trust Environmental  Protection Agency Nebraska Game and Parks Nebraska Bird Partnership

Wild Bird Habitat Store

 

Similar Species

Sandhill Crane

Tricolored Heron