Great Blue Heron - White Morph
When I first saw this bird I though it was a great egret, but then realized how big it was. It's actually a great blue heron, but all white. It's a white morph or great white heron. Taken at Viera Wetlands, Brevard County, FL.
310mm (with Canon 100-400mm); f/10; 1/800
Darrell-F
310mm (with Canon 100-400mm); f/10; 1/800
Darrell-F
0
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nickwphoto
This bird was much larger than an egret. Also note the yellow legs. Herons have the yellow legs and egrets have black legs. This is the reason that I thought it was a white morph.
Darrell-f
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SmugMug Technical Account Manager
Travel = good. Woo, shooting!
nickwphoto
Nice capture which ever one it is!
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Dave
The great white egret is the white morph of the GBH. In North America, specifically Florida, it is called the GWE because it is the largest white egret in north america.
The Great Egret, GE, is called a great white egret everywhere in the world except NA as it is the largest white egret on those continents.
The white morph gets the title GWE in NA, but the Great Egret gets the title everywhere else as being GWE. The GWE, the morph, is only found in FL. The North American that has the title "great egret" is found worldwide and is called GWE.
http://www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/BirdGuide/Great_Egret.html
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This is an egret.
Cheers!
Actually, and I don't mean to beat a dead horse, but Darrel is correct. It is the rare white morph. Scroll down and you can see a pic of the GBH white morph version.
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After a good bit of researching on the internet and the responses here, I'm now confident that this bird is the White Morph of the Great Blue Heron and quite rare. I even went back to search for him to try get more pictures that might show a head plume or shaggy neck plume. I found him again, but could not get close enough for photographs.
The most concise reference that I found is the Internet Field Guide to Birds. There are good pictures and a confirmation that the yellowish legs are a distinguishing characteristic of the White Morph of the Great Blue Heron.
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I have to agree with your assessment. If this were a Great Egret the legs would be black. Another name for this Heron is the Wurdemann's Heron.
Nice find. This one is obviously an immature Heron lacking the ornate plumes on the back of the head.
Darrell,
Your research and conclusions are right on the money. Field Guide to Birds by Donald and Lillian Stokes has an excellent picture of the white morph. Other than the legs appearing somewhat more orange, it matches your image. They state it is considered rare and is only seen in south Florida.
You have me looking back through my thousands of egret images. I'm wondering if I've seen one and inadvertently wrote it off as another great egret.
Thanks for the awakening...GREAT CATCH!!!
Have fun,
Phil
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Jeff,
The white morph has that same blue-gray coloring above the bill and near the eyes that normal bird has which might be what we're seeing as a greenish color in Darrell's shot. Also, from what I've read, the white morph only has one feather that extends from just above the eyes to the back of the neck. It's hard to tell if it is there or not in Darrell's shot because of the wind.
At any rate, it certainly doesn't look like your average great egret and Darrell did a great job of stirring our interest.
Have fun,
Phil
www.sunglophoto.com
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I hate to admit this, but I live in southwest Florida and I never heard of the white morph before Darrell's post. Like I said, I'm now in the process of going through all my great egret shots to see if I have a morph in my archives.
I ran into the same issue with an immature little blue heron which are also white. It's very easy to mistake them for a snowy egret until you do a quick look at the feet. Just to muddy the waters even more, there's a white morph reddish egret...UGH! Twenty minutes shooting birds, three days trying to figure out what you shot...
Have fun,
Phil
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I saw this thread and since I took a picture of an actual Great White Heron I wanted to share. I took this pictures in the Keys last year.
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I took this picture at Aransas State Park, TX while on a photo trip aboard The Skimmer
I photographed this morph on Sunday aboard a different charter.
Edit: Did you see the whoopers too?
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Randy
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