| Dictionary: night heron |
| 5min Related Video: night heron |
| Animal Encyclopedia: Black-crowned night heron |
Nycticorax nycticorax
SUBFAMILY
Ardeinae
TAXONOMY
Ardea nycticorax Linnaeus, 1758, Europe. Four subspecies
OTHER COMMON NAMES
English: Night heron; French: Bilhoreau gris; German: Nachtreiher; Spanish: Martinete.
PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS
A stocky dark gray and white heron with a distinctive glossy black bill, crown, and back. Length is 22–25.5 in (56–65 cm); weight is 18.5–28 oz (525–800 g). During breeding it develops white head plumes that may reach 10 in (25 cm) long. It has relatively short legs that do not extend much beyond the tail when in flight. Juveniles are cryptic gray-brown with buff and white spots above and stripes below.
DISTRIBUTION
Occurs across the temperate and tropical world from North and South America, Europe, Africa, and Asia to the East Indies.
HABITAT
Typically found along the vegetated margins of shallow freshwater or brackish rivers, streams, ponds, lakes, marshes, swamps, mangroves, and mud flats. Also uses grasslands and coastal habitats, especially on migration, and unlike most herons occurs on high mountains. Uses pastures, ponds, reservoirs, canals, ditches, fishponds, rice fields, wet-crop fields, and dry grasslands. Usually nests in bushes and trees but also in reeds, sedge, grass tussocks, on the ground in protected areas like islands, and in protected locations in urban areas. Large nesting colonies especially appear to be associated with protected sites in large wetlands.
BEHAVIOR
A noisy bird having a raucous "quawk" call. Also has a breeding call that is like the sound of a rubber band being plunked and followed by a buzz or hiss. It flies with wing beats that are faster than most herons. Roosts by day in trees and bushes and is most often seen flying to roost in the morning and out in the evening, giving the quawk call. Roosts commonly are in rural areas and within towns.
FEEDING ECOLOGY AND DIET
Typically feeds at night, locating prey by sight and sound, also feeds during the day when nesting. Usual method is standing in a crouched posture and making a lunging strike at prey. During daylight, it may run, dive into the water from the air,
hover, swim, or use its wings to startle prey. Also attracts fish by vibrating its bill or using baits. Mostly a solitary forager, maintaining territories that it defends vigorously. Also feeds in aggregations when prey is highly concentrated. Fish, frogs, and aquatic insects predominate in the diet. Often eats the young of other colonial nesting waterbirds.
REPRODUCTIVE BIOLOGY
In temperate areas, nesting occurs in spring, often early, but in tropical and subtropical areas nesting is more variable. The species often nests in rural, suburban, and urban settings, particularly in zoos. Nesting is usually colonial, in single-species or mixed-species colonies that number sometimes in the thousands. Nests are a platform of sticks and reeds, 12–18 in (30–45 cm) wide. Eggs are green to pale blue-green. Clutch size is two to five eggs with an overall range of one to seven. Incubation averages 23 days. Parents brood the young for 10 days. The young clamber out of the nest by three weeks and fledge in six or seven weeks. Nesting success is often high.
CONSERVATION STATUS
Not threatened. However, nesting is limited to few areas in some regions, such as in Europe, so conservation of these sites is crucial. In North America, populations declined due to pesticides, particularly up to the 1960s.
SIGNIFICANCE TO HUMANS
Fairly tolerant of human activities, and often nest and roost near humans. Night herons are often killed at fish hatcheries and are still hunted for food in some places. Most human interaction has been positive for the species.
| Western Bird Guide: black-crowned night-heron |
Voice: A flat quok! or quark! Most often heard at dusk.
Range: S. Canada to Falklands; Eurasia, Africa, Pacific Is.
Habitat: Marshes, shores; roosts in trees.
| WordNet: night heron |
The noun has one meaning:
Meaning #1:
nocturnal or crepuscular herons
Synonym: night raven
| Wikipedia: Black-crowned Night Heron |
| Black-crowned Night Heron | ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conservation status | ||||||||||||||
| Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||
| Binomial name | ||||||||||||||
| Nycticorax nycticorax (Linnaeus, 1758) |
The Black-crowned Night Heron (Nycticorax nycticorax) commonly abbreviated to just Night Heron in Eurasia, is a medium-sized heron found throughout a large part of the world, except in the coldest regions and Australasia (where replaced by the closely related Rufous Night Heron, with which it has hybridized in the area of contact).
Contents |
Adults are approximately 64 cm long and weigh 800 g. They have a black crown and back with the remainder of the body white or grey, red eyes, and short yellow legs. Young birds are brown, flecked with white and grey. These are short-necked and stout herons.
The breeding habitat is fresh and salt-water wetlands throughout much of the world. The subspecies N. n. hoactli breeds in North and South America from Canada as far south as northern Argentina and Chile, N. n. obscurus in southernmost South America, N. n. falklandicus in the Falkland Islands, and the nominate race N. n. nycticorax in Europe, Asia and Africa. Black-crowned Night Herons nest in colonies on platforms of sticks in a group of trees, or on the ground in protected locations such as islands or reedbeds. Three to eight eggs are laid.
This heron is migratory in the northernmost part of its range, but otherwise resident (even in the cold Patagonia). The North American population winters in Mexico, the southern United States, Central America, and the West Indies, and the Old World birds winter in tropical Africa and southern Asia.
These birds stand still at the water's edge and wait to ambush prey, mainly at night. They primarily eat small fish, crustaceans, frogs, aquatic insects, small mammal and small birds. During the day they rest in trees or bushes. N. n. hoactli is more gregarious outside the breeding season than the nominate race.
The scientific name, Nycticorax, means "night raven", and refers to this species' nocturnal habits and harsh crow-like call.
In the Falkland Islands, they are known as "quarks", which is an onomatopoeic term.
| Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Nycticorax nycticorax |
|
Close-up of juvenile, Lake Merritt, Oakland, California, USA. |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)
| qua-bird | |
| Celtic Spirit, Vol. 1 (1999 Album by Aine Minogue) | |
| night raven |
| Why is the yellow-crowned night herons endangered? Read answer... | |
| Can heron swim? Read answer... | |
| Were do herons sleep? Read answer... |
| How much danger is the yellow crowned night heron in? | |
| What countries have the yellow crowned night heron been found in? | |
| How does the black crowned night heron survive in the salt marshes? |
Copyrights:
![]() | Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Animal Encyclopedia. Grzimek's Animal Life Encyclopedia. Copyright © 2005 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Western Bird Guide. Peterson Field Guide to Western Birds, by Roger Tory Peterson. Copyright © 1990 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | WordNet. WordNet 1.7.1 Copyright © 2001 by Princeton University. All rights reserved. Read more | |
![]() | Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Black-crowned Night Heron". Read more |
Mentioned in