Pelicans and herons typically do not live in desert environments, as they prefer habitats with abundant water sources like lakes, rivers, and wetlands. These birds rely on aquatic ecosystems for feeding and breeding. While they may occasionally be found near the edges of desert areas where water is present, they are not adapted to the harsh, arid conditions of the desert itself.
No, pelicans live near inland or coastal water.
Hawks will eat young herons. They will also eat the eggs of herons. The hawk will not try to eat an adult heron because of the size of the heron. An adult herons wing size can stretch to 6 feet wide.
hawks, pelicans, and herons
A listing of animals who live in the desert can be found at the related link listed below. Some of the animals that live in the desert are camels, wind scorpion, bighorn sheep, coyote, desert tortoise, Rattlesnake, Roadrunner, fishes of various types (pupfish in the Death Valley desert), Hawks, Pelicans, Owls, Herons, Stocks, Toads, Frogs, Lizards, desert foxes, wolves, kestrels, jackrabbits, and cactus wrens. Also, snakes and lizards of various types. Plus, there is a 'Gila Monster'.
herons live in nests by the water
ducks, geese and swans spoonbills herons storks ibises waterfowl such as swamphens and moorhens cranes pelicans grebes cormorants sandpipers snipes
Petrels, loons, storks, grebes, flamingos, ducks, albatrosses, pelicans and herons.
seagulls, pelicans, ducks, geese, swans, osprey, loons, cormorants, cranes, herons, turns and dippers.
Herons, ibis, cranes, thrashers, wrens, blackbirds, pelicans, terns, skimmers, sandpipers, willet, turnstone.
No, herons eat creatures that live in ditches.
No.
yes