Showing posts with label Louisiana Wetlands. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Louisiana Wetlands. Show all posts

Monday, March 14, 2011

Among Egrets and Alligators

Bird life along the coast outside my windows is naturally plentiful. A part of any walk on the beach is bound to be through flocks of gulls, skittering ruddy turnstones and under the elegant wingspan of soaring pelicans. Season and weather conditions influence both the number and type of birds encountered, and while there is some constancy, one of the examples not seen along the east coast of central Florida during winter and early spring is the egret. Probable that many of them move farther south to warmer coastal waters, but many of them are satisfied to move inland to lakes and waterways less troubled by cold wind. I was surprised to see last month two egrets calmly foraging in the grass verge of a freeway exit ramp in downtown Orlando, unmoved by the approach of cars up the ramp or the high speed swoosh of cars on the freeway side. The absence of any water seemed unimportant against the presence of grasshoppers in the six inch grass.


Though most of my life is identified with large cities, and while certainly not any kind of biologist, growing up in Louisiana left me with at least a kinship with bayous and swamp and the life that thrives in those ecosystems. Most days of my youth were spent riding a bicycle on paved streets that marked the habitat of more cats and dogs than anything else, but weekends and holidays spent at bayou camps fishing and hunting were many and from those weekends I developed an abiding appreciation of the wet green and cypress knee beauty of South Louisiana bayous.


The southern fringes of Louisiana’s extensive marshland are home to the largest species of egrets native to America. Unlike the smaller egrets that populate the summer coast of Florida, Louisiana egrets stand three feet tall, with a wingspan of five feet. By mid-April these giant egrets have mated and built nests in bushes or on tree branches, laid and hatched their eggs. Egret pairs usually produce four chicks which require six weeks of near constant feeding, but by the end of May the chicks will begin to fend for themselves.


The weeks from birth to self-sufficiency are like that of almost all creatures in nature, fraught with a host of dangers from spring storms and floods and from natural enemies like hawks, raccoons, alligators and snapping turtles. Not unheard of for alligators to batter bushes and tree trunks with their tail to shake the young down from the nest. A nasty thought, but tame compared to the bird’s onetime worst enemy, man. Now the birds are protected, but in earlier times plume hunters almost wiped out the egrets in southern Louisiana, providing decoration for women’s hats in the form of a luxuriant plume called aigrettes which the egrets exhibit only during courtship and later lose. But that is the past, and if we are able to avoid tragedies like last year’s BHP oil spill which has destroyed hundreds of square miles of Louisiana wetland, perhaps these beautiful birds will continue to flourish.


The two black and white photos of Louisiana egrets come from a 1973 Time-Life book, The Bayous.

In the top photograph an egret stands poised on a dead cypress tree. It is a carefully balanced stance from which the bird can launch instantly into flight.

The second photograph shows an adult egret repairing the platform of twigs that serve as a nest. The male procures the materials and the female does the building.

About Me

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Oak Hill, Florida, United States
A longtime expat relearning the footwork of life in America