The Beautiful Black-crowned Night Heron (Nycticorax nycticorax): A Nocturnal Bird of Elegance

The black-crowned night heron lives on five of the world’s continents and is the most geographically widespread of all herons. Found year round mainly in the southern hemisphere, they breed and over winter more commonly within regions of the northern hemisphere.

Unlike most herons the black-crowned night heron is stocky with a short neck and legs. The adult has a black back and cap or crown with pale grey wings and white underparts. The forehead is white which extends in a thin white bar over the top of the eye in contrast to the deep red iris. From the back of the head a number of thin white plumes emerge which stand proud during courtship rituals but otherwise lay flat down the bird’s back. The bill, which is short and thick, is black and the legs yellow, changing to a pinkish red during the breeding season. Males and females are identical apart from the female being generally smaller in overall size. Juvenile birds are predominantly brown over all with a darker shade to the upperparts and upperwings with pale spots and a lighter beige, streaked white, chest and underparts. The bill is a pale yellow along the sides and the iris of the eye orange.

Black-crowned night herons belong the Family Ardeidae which incorporates approximately sixty six different species of wading birds consisting of egrets, bitterns and herons. Herons have been revered for generations by many societies around the world and are regarded as symbols of good fortune, patience, beauty, grace, strength, purity, long life and wisdom.

The preferred diet is fish but also, dependent upon habitat, squid, crustaceans, large insects, frogs, snakes and rodents, all of which are captured near the water’s edge mostly during the night.

Black-crowned night herons can be found in North and South America, Central Europe, sub-Saharan and East Africa and Central and Southern Asia. There are four sub-species which have defined habitats as follows:

Migratory across large areas of southern Canada, northern and central United States they are residents of the Hawaiian Islands, southern United States through central and south America to northern Chile and as far south as the Patagonia region of Argentina.

Often overwintering south of their breeding range this sub-species can be found across central and southern Europe and from north Africa eastwards through central, south and eastern Asia, taking in Madagascar, Indonesia, the Philippines, China, Taiwan and Japan.

 

This sub-species is resident throughout the year from southern Peru and the Atacama region of northern Chile bordered by the Pacific, through northern Argentina and south to the continent’s tip at Tierra del Fuego, an archipelago separated from the mainland by the Strait of Magellan.

Although mainly a night feeder these birds can often be seen standing or perching motionless on the edge of water or wading in a slow hunched, stooped, strutting movement. They breed and roost in flocks and during the day will sit in a tree or bush close to the water’s edge not moving at all. Due to their high dependence on fish as the main diet staple they choose wet or marshy areas of brackish, salt or fresh water including mangrove swamps, lakes, ponds, paddy fields, reedbeds, rivers and tidal flats. They are easily distinguishable from other herons who, in the main, have long necks and legs, slim bodies and long thin beaks.

 

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