Great white egret attracts attention in Rankin Inlet, Nunavut - Action News
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Great white egret attracts attention in Rankin Inlet, Nunavut

Egrets are more usually spotted in the Everglades or on the Pacific coast so the presence of this egret immediately attracted local photographers, including Bernice Sandy, who took many photos of the unusual bird.

The white-plumed bird's usual range lies much to the south

This great egret was photographed in Rankin Inlet, Nunavut this past weekend. A large heron with all-white feathers, it can stand up 1 metre and measure from80 to 104 cm. (Submitted by Bernice Sandy)

A large, white-feathered birda great egretflew in last week to the western Hudson Bay community of Rankin Inlet, where it's since been seen feasting on sticklebacks in a marshy pond.

Egrets are more usually spotted in the Everglades or on the Pacific coast, so the presence of this egret immediately attracted local photographers, including Bernice Sandy, who took many photos of the unusual bird.

After hearing from others about the egret by the Rankin Inlet Healing Facility, Sandy said she headed out herself to find and photograph the bird. It took her two days to locate the egret, which she photographed on her cellphone's camera Oct. 17 and Oct. 18.

Viewing Sandy's photos of this egret, Eric Reed of Environment and Climate Change Canada in Yellowknife told CBCNews, "it's a very exciting sighting."

"It's not completely unheard of, but it's very, very rare," hesaid.

Accidentalvisitors or vagrants

In 2017, an egret ended up in Inuvik, also in October.

When birds like these egrets are spotted outside their ranges, they're called accidental visitors or vagrants.

Reed said egrets belong to a species which breeds much further south thanthe Arctic.

The breeding range for egrets in North America is centred around the United States and even the middle and southern parts of the U.S., he said.

This great egret was photographed by a Rankin Inlet resident in a marsh by the community's healing centre for men. (Submitted by Bernice Sandy)

But the egrets, particularly juvenile egrets, often head off on their own after the end of the breeding season.

"Some of them will undertake really long northwards or westwards or eastward migrations, you know, not directly related to migration towards the wintering grounds," Reed said.

"They're going in checking out new territories and then as the weather cools and changes, they'll come back."

Reed said Rankin Inlet's egret was probably following a waterway or pushed north by winds.

"Hopefully it flies back south when the weather cools off a little bit. It has been a warm fall. You know, if everything was frozen over, we wouldn't be seeing that," Reed said.

Citizen science

Yousif Attia, an expert birder and specialistwith Birds Canada, suggested northerners who see unusual birds enter their sighting oncitizen science programs.

Theyincludethe annual Christmas bird count, which includes the North, and eBird Canada.

On eBird, anyone can sign on, enter their bird sightings and upload photos and sound recordings.

"This information can be used by researchers, conservationists and other birders to help understand changes in abundance," Attia said.

Other unusual birds sighted within the last year in Nunavut include pelicans, barn swallows, an American coot, and blue jays.