Wetlands & Waterfowl's Guide to North American Waterfowl:
Click to load:
American Bittern
American Widgeon
Black- Crowned Night Heron
Black Duck
Blue-Winged Teal
Canada Goose
Canvasback
Cattle Egret
Common Egret
Cinnamon Teal
Gadwall
Great Blue Heron
Great Egret
Green-Winged Teal
Greater Scaup
Lesser Scaup
Mallard
Mute Swan
Northern Pintail
Northern Shoveler
Redhead
Ring-Necked
Snowy Egret
Snow Goose
Trumpeter Swan
Wood Duck
Common Egret
Scroll down for details Scientific Name: Casmerodius albus

Habitat: marshes, lakes, lagoons, wooded swamps and streams.


Appearance: 37-41" long. large and white. Yellow bill; legs and feet black. Has long plumes on back during nesting season. Flies with neck folded onto back.


Food: Fish, frogs, water snakes and insects.


Nesting: Nest is a platform of sticks in bush or tree 20-40 feet above ground or water. Female lays 1-6 pale blue or greenish eggs and both male and female incubate eggs for 23-26 days. Young are downy, leave the nest 6-7 weeks after hatching. Usually nests in colonies.

The Common Egret was nearly driven to extinction in the late 1800's by the plume trade. Plume hunters called this bird "long white", for the filamentous feathers that trail down its back. As the popularity of plumed hats grew, so did the outcry against them. The founders of America's young conservation movement decried the plume trade as inhumane, and worked to enact laws to protect egrets and other plume birds. By World War I, with the change of fashion and attitude concerning wildlife protection, breeding plumes on ladies hats had all but disappeared.

Additional Photographs: Egret, Side View
Egret, Flying Overhead
Common Egret, By Rushing River
Egret, standing on stick
Egret, side-view, flying