Yellow-crowned night heron spotted in Calgary is 2nd time species seen in Alberta - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:01 AM | Calgary | -12.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Yellow-crowned night heron spotted in Calgary is 2nd time species seen in Alberta

The recent sighting of a yellow-crowned night heronsurprised Calgary's birdingcommunity becauseits usual habitat is in Mexico and South America.

Naturalist Brian Keating says the bird is usually found in places like South America

Naturalist Brian Keating spotted a yellow-crowned night heron in Calgary's Inglewood Bird Sanctuary on Friday. (Brian Keating)

The recent sighting of a yellow-crowned night heronsurprised Calgary's birdingcommunity becauseits usual habitat is in Mexico and South America.

Naturalist Brian Keating saidthe interesting looking bird was first spotted in early October, but it wasn't until its photo landed on the app eBird,one of the world's largest databases for bird observations,that it was realized to be ayellow-crowned heron.

"It was posted on the rare bird alert the next dayand all kinds of people have seen it.Some have comequite along ways away, even from areas north of Edmonton and as far south as Lethbridge and farther," he toldThe Homestretchon Monday.

He says the heron is at least 1,000 kilometres away from familiar territory andhis best guess as to why it landed in Calgaryis that it may have taken a wrong turn.

"I have a theory that perhaps some birds just simply get it wrong," he said.

"This was an immature, yellow-crowned night heron it may have just gotten its directional bearings confused."

Keating says the heron, which was likely quite young, was in a cottonwood tree preparing for its evening hunt. (Brian Keating)

Keating says he got a glimpse of the bird himself while it was sitting in an old cottonwood tree at the Inglewood Bird Sanctuary.

"When I saw it, I think it was just preparing to go out for the evening hunt. It was scratching and stretching andbasically looking a lot more alert than its daytime roosting behaviour."

And while the find is surprising, he says bird migration can evolve, so it's possible more yellow-crowned night herons will make their way here.

"Birds are changing migratory patterns ever so slightly, andsometimes quite drastically, all the time. And this individual may have been nature's experiment," he said.

"But it is a big deal for the Calgary birding community. It's only the second time this bird has been seen in this province."

Heron facts

There are seven types of night herons in the world. Keating sayshe's come across some inAfrica, South America, Australia andon various Pacific islands.

"We've often found them when we've been out at night in the Galapagos. I remember watching one in recent years, itwas dockside with street lights illuminating the bird as it was hunting for little fish that were coming up into the shallower waters."

For those interested in spotting one in Calgary, Keating says theherons are thick-billed, stout, medium-sized with short necks andlegs.

"The young birds, like the one that we had here last week, are brown and flecked with white," he said.

As the name implies, they are mainly active during the nighttime, hunting fish, frogs and small mammals.

"They rely heavily on crustaceans, especially crabs," he said. "I watched the one on the Galapagos Islands catch what's called a Sally Lightfoot crab, which is a bright orange crab, and it dismembered its legs."

Keating says he spotted an adult yellow-crowned night heron in the Galapagos Islands a couple years ago. He says the heron stood like a statue for several minutes, patiently waiting for a fiddler crab to appear at the entryway to his hiding hole. (Brian Keating)

Keating says you can usually find herons nesting in colonies on islands, in a metre-wide nests of trigs in trees or shrubs.

"It's obviously way too soon to tell. But it may be thatsomedaywesee yellow-crowned night heron nesting here, too. They have been found as far north as southern Ontario and even Michigan in the United States," he said.

"So they are capable of of spending time here, no doubt about it."


For more fascinating stories about Alberta's wildlife from naturalist Brian Keating, visit hiswebsiteand check out these stories:


With files fromThe Homestretch.