DISCOVERING EVERGLADES PLANTS AND ANIMALS (continued)
Birds
From the pelicanwhose mouth can hold more than its
belly canto the tiny hummingbird, the birds of Everglades National Park
add beauty, amusement, excitement, and drama to the daily scene. Much
more conspicuous than the park's other animals, they can be enjoyed with
no special effort. But a pair of binoculars and a field guide will make
bird-watching a more rewarding pastime for you.
Many of the park's birds are large and colorful, and
so tolerant of man's presence that you can observe them closely without
the aid of binoculars. The Anhinga Trail and other sites on or near the
main park road provide ready access to activity by herons and egrets,
cormorants, gallinules, and other species that feed upon the fish,
frogs, and lesser life of the waters.
(click on images for an enlargement in a new window)
The anhinga, after whom the park's most popular trail
is named, is a favorite with visitors. It is also called water-turkey,
probably because of its large size and long, white-tipped tail feathers.
A third name, snake bird, derives from the anhinga's habit of swimming
almost totally submerged with its long, snaky neck above the surface.
The anhinga is a skilled fisherman, seeking out its quarry by swimming
underwater. It spears a fish with its beak, surfaces, tosses the fish
into the air, catches it, and gulps it down head first. During this
activity, the anhinga has gotten soaked to the skin, for, unlike ducks
and many other water birds, it is not well supplied with oil to keep its
plumage dry. So, following a plunge, the anhinga struggles to the branch
of a shrub or tree, and, spreading its wings, hangs its feathers out to
dry.
The everglade kite, one of America's rarest birds,
flies low over the fresh-water marshes, its head pointed downward,
searching for its sole foodthe Pomacea snail. A sharply hooked
beak enables it to remove the snail from its shell. More striking in
appearance is its cousin, the swallow-tailed kite, aerial acrobat of the
hawk familya migrant that nests in the park in spring and spends
the winter in South America. On long, pointed wings this handsome bird
eats in the air while holding itself in one place on the wind. In the
mangroves, it hunts in an unusual way: skimming over the trees, it
snatches lizards and other small animals from the topmost branches.
Red-shouldered hawks, often seen perching on the treetops beside the
park road, feed upon snakes and other small animals. The fish-eating
osprey is another conspicuous resident of the park, and its bulky nests
will be seen when you take a boat trip into Florida Bay or the mangrove
wilderness. The bald eagle, which, sadly, is no longer common in North
America and may soon be exterminated because of pesticide pollution of
its fishing waters, is still holding out in the Everglades region,
where 50 or so breeding pairs seem to be reproducing successfully.
The long-legged wading birds of the heron family are
so numerous and so much alike in appearance that you will need your bird
guide for sure identification. The waders are interesting to watch,
because of the variety of feeding methods. Particularly amusing are the
antics of the reddish egret as it hunts small animals in the shallows of
Florida Bay at low tide. It is much unlike other herons in its manner of
hunting: it lurches through the shallows, dashing to left and right as
if drunk, in pursuit of its prey. This clownish survivor of the old
plume-hunting days exists in Florida in very limited numbers.
Since about 300 species of birds have been recorded
in the park, this sampling barely suggests the pleasures awaiting you if
you plan to spend some time playing the Everglades bird-watching
game.
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