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American Bittern


American Bittern
Photo Information
Copyright: Tom Peak (tkp1165) Gold Star Critiquer/Silver Workshop Editor/Gold Note Writer [C: 152 W: 12 N: 552] (3594)
Genre: Animals
Medium: Color
Date Taken: 2007-09-23
Categories: Birds
Camera: Nikon D 80, Sigma 50-500mm f4-6.3 DG EX APO HSM
Exposure: f/10.0, 1/4000 seconds
More Photo Info: [view]
Photo Version: Original Version
Date Submitted: 2007-10-02 20:35
Viewed: 493
Points: 6
[Note Guidelines] Photographer's Note
This was Taken at the Ridgefield Wildlife Refuge

The American Bittern (Botaurus lentiginosus) is a wading bird of the heron family Ardeidae.

It is a large, chunky, brown bird, very similar to the Eurasian Great Bittern, Botaurus stellaris. It is 59-70 cm (23-27 inches) in length, with a 95-115 cm (37 - 45 inch) wingspan.

Although common in much of its range, the American Bittern is usually well-hidden in bogs, marshes and wet meadows. Usually solitary, it walks stealthily among cattails or bullrushes. If it senses that it has been seen, the American Bittern becomes motionless, with its bill pointed upward, causing it to blend into the reeds. It is most active at dusk. More often heard than seen, this bittern has a call that resembles a congested pump.

Like other members of the heron family, the American Bittern feeds in marshes and shallow ponds, dining on amphibians, fish, insects and reptiles.

This bittern winters in the southern United States and Central America. It summers throughout Canada and much of the United States. As a long-distance migrant, it is a very rare vagrant in Europe, including Great Britain and Ireland. This bird nests in isolated places with the female building the nest and the male guarding it. Two or three eggs get incubated by the female for 29 days, and the chicks leave after 6-7 weeks.

No subspecies are accepted today. However, fossils found in the Ichetucknee River, Florida, and originally described as a new form of heron (Palaeophoyx columbiana; McCoy, 1963) were later recognized to be a smaller, prehistoric subspecies of the American Bittern which lived during the Late Pleistocene (Olson, 1974) and would thus be called B. l. columbianus.

This bird's numbers have declined in the southern parts of its range due to habitat loss.

Many of the folk names[citation needed] are given for its distinctive call made by inhaling and exhaling large quantities of air.

Note From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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To manyee: Picture takingtkp1165 1 10-08 20:26
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Critiques [Translate]

Hello Tom,
Excellent portrait of the American Bittern.
Steve

nice shot of this bittern in its habitat. I like to see the critters in their surroundings - give a good idea of what they're all about. :)

  • Great 
  • manyee Gold Star Critiquer/Gold Star Workshop Editor/Gold Note Writer [C: 3067 W: 231 N: 6168] (21078)
  • [2007-10-03 21:32]
  • [+]

Wow, Tom, what a good shot of that bittern.
It is rare to get a full body view of that elusive bird.
Great markings with the longitudinal white streaks in the chest area.
I am coming up to Seattle mid-November.
Do you have a favorite birding spot to recommend, good for picture taking?
TFS. ; )

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