Botaurus lentiginosus (Rackett, 1813) is a animal in the Ardeidae family, order Pelecaniformes, kingdom Animalia. Not known to be toxic.

Photo of Botaurus lentiginosus (Rackett, 1813) (Botaurus lentiginosus (Rackett, 1813))
๐Ÿฆ‹ Animalia

Botaurus lentiginosus (Rackett, 1813)

Botaurus lentiginosus (Rackett, 1813)

Botaurus lentiginosus, the American bittern, is a large chunky brown wading bird native and breeding across most of North America.

Family
Genus
Botaurus
Order
Pelecaniformes
Class
Aves

About Botaurus lentiginosus (Rackett, 1813)

The American bittern, scientifically named Botaurus lentiginosus (Rackett, 1813), is a large, chunky brown bird. It is very similar to the Eurasian bittern (Botaurus stellaris), though it is slightly smaller, and its plumage is speckled rather than barred. It measures 58โ€“85 cm (23โ€“33 in) in length, has a 92โ€“115 cm (36โ€“45 in) wingspan, and has a body mass of 370โ€“1,072 g (0.816โ€“2.363 lb). Its crown is chestnut brown, with black feather centers. The side of the neck has a bluish-black elongated patch that is larger in males than in females. The hind neck is olive, while the mantle and scapulars are dark chestnut-brown, barred and speckled with black, and some feathers have buff edges. The back, rump, and upper tail-coverts share a similar color, but are more finely speckled with black and have grey feather bases. The tail feathers are chestnut brown with speckled edges, and the primaries and secondaries are blackish-brown with buff or chestnut tips. The cheeks are brown, with a buff superciliary stripe and a similarly colored mustachial stripe. The chin is creamy-white with a chestnut central stripe, and the feathers of the throat, breast, and upper belly are buff and rust-colored, finely outlined with black, which creates a striped effect on the underparts. The eyes are surrounded by yellowish skin, and the iris is pale yellow. Its long, robust bill is yellowish-green, with the upper mandible darker than the lower, and the legs and feet are also yellowish-green. Juveniles look similar to adults, but the sides of their necks are less olive. This species has a range that covers most of North America. It breeds in southern Canada as far north as British Columbia, Great Slave Lake, and Hudson Bay, across much of the United States, and possibly in central Mexico. It migrates south in autumn, and overwinters in the southern United States along the Gulf Coast, most notably in the marshy Everglades of Florida, as well as in Mexico and the Caribbean Islands; past records also exist from Panama and Costa Rica. As a long-distance migrant, it is a very rare vagrant in Europe, including Great Britain and Ireland. It is an aquatic bird that lives in bogs, marshes, and the thickly-vegetated verges of shallow-water lakes and ponds; these water bodies can be fresh, brackish, or saline. It sometimes feeds in open areas in wet meadows and pastures.

Photo: (c) samzhang, all rights reserved

Taxonomy

Animalia โ€บ Chordata โ€บ Aves โ€บ Pelecaniformes โ€บ Ardeidae โ€บ Botaurus

More from Ardeidae

Sources: GBIF, iNaturalist, Wikipedia, NCBI Taxonomy ยท Disclaimer

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