View allAll Photos Tagged bittern

I getting tired of all this dull grey weather, never easy to photograph on days like this. Some shots of these elusive birds taken over the last couple of weeks.

 

I'm still way behind on catching up with contacts uploads, still working my way through them. So thank you all for your support and I'll catch up soon......I hope :-)

Ixobrychus exilis

 

An incredibly secretive bird, I spent the better part of two hours waiting for this bittern to emerge for a photo.

Minsmere, Suffolk, 23rd March 2014.

A tiny heron, furtive and surpassingly well camouflaged, the Least Bittern is one of the most difficult North American marsh birds to spot. Despite its inconspicuousness, however, the species can be rather common within appropriate habitat in its breeding range.

 

Lake Tohopekaliga in Kissimmee, Florida. I attended the Jim Neiger school of flight photography and this was taken aboard his birding pontoon.

  

Blackwater NWR, MD

 

I was very excited to see this guy(a new species for me). I was looking for the virginia rail that went back into the grasses when I saw him emerge from the grasses. This was such a cool fine, very unexpected.

Taken at Blacktoft Sands RSPB reserve.

Botaurus stellaris.....Bittern at Minsmere Nature Reserve, Suffolk, England

These three shots are all full frame,just reduced file size so as to load up easier

(Botaurus lentiginosus)

Image - Copyright 2013 Alan Vernon

 

Leighton Moss 12/10/13

Bittern, taken with digiscope at Attenborough nature reserve, Nottinghamshire

Love this guys scientific name...

#331

Botaurus lentiginosus

07 Mar 2015

CA, SBE Co., Chino Creek Wetlands

My first bittern from Lackford lakes for a couple of years quite a nice surprise as I was scanning the area for snipe

Bittern taken at Minsmere 8thApril2010

Bittern in Stealth Mode at Spring Lake Park in Santa Rosa. I almost didn't see this guy.

My first sighting of this bird and it was pure luck that I saw it. I thought I saw it from the corner of my eye as I drove the backroads northeast of Calgary but it immediately went into the reeds. I turned around and waited. Something spooked it and out it flew. They are usually solitary and well hidden in marshes so are very difficult to see. This was taken at noon almost directly into the sun so the light was not great. I went back the next evening hoping for better light but there was no sign of the bittern. I was surprised how much the pond had dried in just a day.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/American_Bittern

 

Thank you for your visit and comments.

Bittern at the North Moors Pool, Upton Warren, Worcs.

Savannah National Wildlife Refuge

A Bittern (_Botaurus stellaris_) in the reeds at Blashford Lakes.

This display of the bittern's plumage was because several Cattle Egrets were encroaching its area!

Bittern (Botaurus stellaris). Woodwalton Fen NNR, Ramsey Heights, Cambridgeshire. April 3, 2025.

 

Almost certainly the same individual as the previous upload. I think this is the male, but am happy to be corrected; its beak was noticeably longer and the lores conspicuously paler than the second individual seen.

Merritt Island, FL.

Great Meadows National Wildlife Refuge (Concord, MA)

Botaurus exilis

Mirasol, avetorillo pantano

Medio Queso, Los Chiles

 

Historia Natural

 

Reproducción

 

Su nido consiste en una hemisfera poco profunda compacta y bien construida a partir de hojas de enea, sostenida sobre el agua con enea o juncos. Ponen 3 ó 4 huevos, o en ocasiones 6, de color azul claro. Se reproducen de junio a setiembre.

 

Comportamiento

 

Casi siempre son solitarios.

Son tímidos y escurridizos.

 

Ciclo anual

 

En Costa Rica la población incluye individuos residentes permanentes e individuos migratorios neárticos. Asimismo, efectúa movimientos estacionales pronunciados, relacionados con cambios del nivel del agua en su hábitat.

 

Habitat y Distribución

 

Habitat

 

Se mantienen en densos sobrecrecimientos de enea (Typha sp.), juncos, pastizales altos en pantanos de agua dulce con hierbas, o en campos de arroz.

 

Distribución

 

Es una especie de rara a común en ciertas localidades de ambas vertientes, sobre todo en las bajuras, aunque ocasionalmente asciende a los 1400 m. Solo se ha comprobado su reproducción en la llanura del río Tempisque (Parque Nacional Palo Verde), la región de Río Frío (Laguna de Caño Negro) y Westfalia (provincia de Limón), aunque es posible que anide ampliamente. Efectúa movimientos estacionales relacionados con los niveles de agua. Es probable que algunas aves del norte acudan a invernar de octubre a marzo.

 

Distribución fuera de Costa Rica

 

Se encuentra desde el sur de Canadá hasta Perú y el norte de Argentina. Invierna desde el sur de E.U.A. hacia el sur.

 

Distribución de Area de conservación

 

Amistad CaribeCordillera Volcanica CentralOsaTempisqueTortugueroHuetar NorteArenalGuanacastePacifico CentralAmistad Pacifico

 

Demografía y Conservación

 

Estado de amenaza

 

Es considerada una especie bajo amenaza de extinción, debido a la pérdida de su hábitat por drenaje, utilizado por el ser humano, para establecer cultivos como el arroz y el sorgo, etc.. Está protegida y regulada por la Ley de Conservación de la Vida Silvestre No. 7317, la Ley Orgánica del Ambiente No. 7554 y el decreto No. 26435-MINAE.

 

Descripción

 

Descripción científica

 

Mide 30 cm. y pesa 80 grs. Es diminuto y de colores vivos.

Los adultos presentan manto y coronilla de color negro lustroso (machos) o castaño (hembras), con lista escapular blanca y manchas grandes anteadas en las alas. Las remeras son fuscas con las puntas color ante y el abdomen es blanco. La zona anterior del cuello es rayada con ante o rojizo y blanco y los flancos cuentan con rayas en forma de flecha. El iris es amarillo anteado claro. La maxila es negra, la inferior color carne, y la tomia es amarillenta. Las patas son verde amarillentas.

Los individuos inmaduros son semejantes a la hembra, pero con la coronilla y el manto más pálidos y salpicados con ante. Por debajo son rayados con fusco, al igual que sobre la mancha ante del ala. Ninguna otra garza pequeña o polluela de agua presenta un patrón similar.

 

Información taxonómica

 

Reino: Animalia

Filo: Chordata

Clase: Aves

Orden: Pelecaniformes

Familia: Ardeidae

Género: Ixobrychus

I photgraphed this Bittern for a while and then noticed that he was leaning slightly backwards against the Bullrush Weed resting. You can see him actually leaning back with the indent in the feathers and legs askew, never saw this before.

This is what happens when you try to hand hold a 500mm in a 40 mph wind. :)

D

Bittern now takes the curve at Kirkham Abbey on her way to Scarborough. 16/9/72.

Great Bittern, Botaurus stellaris, 大麻鳽, Mai Po Nature Reserve 米埔自然保護區, 29 Nov 2015 (D4s, AF-S NIKKOR 600MM F/4G ED VR)

LaChua Trail/Paynes Prairie

Gainesville, FL

 

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Seen at Fernhill Wetlands in Washington County, OR

American Bittern

 

Many thanks to all those who View, Comment and or Fave My Photos... It is greatly appreciated... Roy

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