PLATE CCCLXXII.--ADULT MALE AND YOUNG.
Genus: ARDEA COEPRULEA, Linn. [Egretta caerulea.]
Along with a few other Herons, this is, comparatively
speaking, confined within narrow limits along our southern coast in winter.
It occurs, however, in most parts of the Floridas, where it is a constant resident,
and whence, at the approach of summer, vast multitudes are seen proceeding northward,
in search of suitable places in which they may rear their young in security.
Many, however, go southward, beyond the limits of the United States, and proceed
coastwise to Texas and Mexico to spend the winter, especially the younger birds,
when still in that singular white plumage which differs so much from that of
the young of every other known species of this genus, except that of the Reddish
Egret (A. rufescens). At New Orleans, where it arrives at the same period, both
from Mexico and the Floridas, its first appearance in spring is about the beginning
of March; at which time also multitudes leave the Floridas on their way eastward,
to settle in Georgia, the Carolinas, and other States farther east, as far as
Long Island in that of New York. Beyond this, I believe, no birds of the species
have been met with. They rarely, if ever, proceed far inland, or leave the shores
of our large rivers and estuaries. On the Mississippi, the swamps and lakes
on the borders of which are so well adapted to the habits of these birds, few
individuals are ever seen above Natchez. About the beginning of September, by
which time the young are able to shift for themselves, they return southward.
When in the Floridas, during winter, I observed that the Blue Herons associated
with other species, particularly the White Heron, Ardea Egretta, and the Louisiana
Heron, Ardea Ludoviciana, all of which were in the habit of roosting together
in the thick evergreen low bushes, that cover the central parts of the islands
along the coast. Their passage to and from their feeding places, is as regular
as the rising and setting of the sun, and, unless frequently disturbed, they
betake themselves every night to the same locality, and almost to the same spot.
In the morning, they rise with one accord from the roosts on which they have
been standing all night on one leg, the other drawn up among the feathers of
the abdomen, their neck retracted, and their head and bill buried beneath their
scapulars. On emerging from their retreats, they at once proceed to some distant
place in search of food, and spend the day principally on the head waters of
the rivers, and the fresh-water lakes of the interior, giving a decided preference
to the soft mud banks, where small crabs or fiddlers are abundant, on which
they feed greedily, when the inland ponds have been dried tip, and consequently
no longer supply them with such fishes as they are wont to feed upon.
There, and at this season, reader, you may see this graceful Heron, quietly
and in silence walking along the margins of the water, with an elegance and
grace which can never fail to please you. Each regularly-timed step is lightly
measured, while the keen eye of the bird seeks for and watches the equally cautious
movements of the objects towards which it advances with all imaginable care.
When at a proper distance, it darts forth its bill with astonishing celerity,
to pierce and secure its prey; and this it does with so much precision, that,
while watching some at a distance with a glass, I rarely observed an instance
of failure. If fish is plentiful, on the shallows near the shore, when it has
caught one, it immediately swallows it, and runs briskly through the water,
striking here and there, and thus capturing several in succession. Two or three
dashes of this sort, afford sufficient nourishment for several hours, and when
the bird has obtained enough it retires to some quiet place, and remains there
in an attitude of repose until its hunger returns. During this period of rest,
however, it is as watchful as ever, and on hearing the least noise, or perceiving
the slightest appearance of danger, spreads its wings, and flies off to some
other place, sometimes to a very distant one. About an hour before sunset, they
are again seen anxiously searching for food. When at length satisfied, they
rise simultaneously from all parts of the marsh, or shore, arrange themselves
into loose bodies, and ascending to the height of fifty or sixty yards in the
air, fly in a straight course towards their roosting place. I saw very few of
these birds during the winter, on or near the river St. John in Florida; but
on several occasions met with some on small ponds in the pine barrens, at a
considerable distance from any large stream, whither they had been attracted
by the great number of frogs.
The flight of the Blue Heron is rather swifter than that of the Egret, Ardea
candidissima, and considerably more so than that of the Great Blue Heron, Ardea
Herodias, but very similar to that of the Louisiana Heron, Ardea Ludoviciana.
When the bird is travelling, the motion is performed by flappings in quick succession,
which rapidly propel it in a direct line, until it is about to alight, when
it descends in circular sailings of considerable extent towards the spot selected.
During strong adverse winds, they fly low, and in a continuous line, passing
at the necessary distance from the shores to avoid danger, whether at an early
or a late hour of the day. I recollect that once, on such an occasion, when,
on the 15th of March, I was in company with my friend JOHN BACHMAN, I saw a
large flock about sunset arising from across the river, and circling over a
large pond, eight miles distant from Charleston. So cautious were they, that
although the flock was composed of several hundred individuals, we could not
manage to get so much as a chance of killing one. I have been surprised to see
how soon the Blue Herons become shy after reaching the districts to which they
remove for the purpose of breeding from their great rendezvous the Floridas,
where I never experienced any difficulty in procuring as many as I wished. In
Louisiana, on the other hand, I have found them equally vigilant on their first
arrival. On several occasions, when I had placed myself under cover, to shoot
at some, while on their way to their roosts or to their feeding grounds, I found
it necessary to shift from one place to another, for if one of them had been
fired at and had fallen in a particular place, all that were in its company
took care not to pass again near it, but when coming up diverged several hundred
yards, and increased their speed until past, when they would assume their more
leisurely flappings. In South Carolina, where they are very shy on their arrival,
I have seen them fly off on hearing the very distant report of a gun, and alight
on the tops of the tallest trees, where they would congregate in hundreds, and
whence they would again fly off on the least apprehension of danger. But when
once these Herons have chosen a place to nestle in, or reached one in which
they bred the preceding year, they become so tame as to allow you to shoot as
many as you are disposed to have.
While on Cayo Island, in the Gulf of Mexico, on the 10th of April, 1837, I observed
large flocks of the Blue and Green Herons, Ardea coerulea and A. virescens,
arriving from the westward about the middle of the day. They flew at a considerable
height, and came down like so many Hawks, to alight on the low bushes growing
around the sequestered ponds; and this without any other noise than the rustling
of their wings as they glided through the air towards the spot on which they
at once alighted. There they remained until sunset, when they all flew off,
so that none were seen there next day. This shews that although these species
migrate both by day and night, they are quite diurnal during the period of their
residence in any section of the country which they may have chosen for a season.
It is more than probable that it has been from want of personal knowledge of
the habits of these birds, that authors have asserted that all Herons are nocturnally
inclined. This certainly is by no means the case, although they find it advantageous
to travel by night during their migrations, which is a remarkable circumstance
as opposed to their ordinary habits. In the instance above mentioned, I found
the birds remarkably gentle, which was probably owing to fatigue.
The Blue Heron breeds earlier or later according to the temperature of the district
to which it resorts for that purpose, and therefore earlier in Florida, where
considerable numbers remain, during the whole year, than in other parts of the
United States. Thus I have found them ill the southern parts of that country,
sitting on their eggs, on the 1st of March, fully a month earlier than in the
vicinity of Bayou Sara, on the Mississippi, where they are as much in advance
of those which betake themselves, in very small numbers indeed, to our Middle
Districts, in which they rarely begin to breed before the fifteenth of May.
The situations which they choose for their nests are exceedingly varied. I have
found them sitting on their eggs on the Florida Keys, and on the islands in
the Bay of Galveston, in Texas, in nests placed amidst and upon the most tangled
cactuses, so abundant on those curious isles, on the latter of which the climbing
rattlesnake often gores itself with the eggs of this and other species of Heron,
as well as with their unfledged young. In the lower parts of Louisiana, it breeds
on low bushes of the water-willow, as it also does in South Carolina; whereas,
on the islands on the coast of New Jersey, and even on the mainland of that
State, it places its nest on the branches of the cedar and other suitable trees.
Wherever you find its breeding place, you may expect to see other birds in company
with it, for like all other species, excepting perhaps the Louisiana Heron,
it rarely objects to admit into its society the Night Heron, the Yellow-crowned
Heron, or the White Egret.
The heronries of the southern portions of the United States are often of such
extraordinary size as to astonish the passing traveller. I confess that I myself
might have been as sceptical on this point as some who, having been accustomed
to find in all places the Heron to be a solitary bird, cannot be prevailed on
to believe the contrary, had I not seen with my own eyes the vast multitudes
of individuals of different species breeding together in peace in certain favourable
localities.
The nest of the Blue Heron, wherever situated, is loosely formed of dry sticks,
sometimes intermixed with green leaves of various trees, and with grass or moss,
according as these materials happen to be plentiful in the neighbourhood. It
is nearly flat, and can scarcely be said to have a regular lining. Sometimes
you see a solitary nest fixed on a cactus, a bush, or a tree; but a little beyond
this you may observe from six to ten, placed almost as closely together as you
would have put them had you measured out the space necessary for containing
them. Some are seen low over the water, while others are placed high; for, like
the rest of its tribe, this species is rather fond of placing its tenement over
or near the liquid element.
The eggs are usually three, rarely four; and I have never found a nest of this
species containing five eggs, as is stated by WILSON, who, probably found a
nest of the Green Heron containing that number among others of the present species.
They measure an inch and three quarters in length, by an inch and a quarter
in breadth, being about the size of those of Ardea candidissima, though rather
more elongated, and precisely of the same colour.
The young bird is at first almost destitute of feathers, but scantily covered
with yellowish-white down. When fully fledged, its bill and legs are greenish-black,
and its plumage pure white, or slightly tinged with cream-colour, the tips of
the three outer primaries light greyish-blue. Of this colour the bird remains
until the breeding season, when, however, some individuals exhibit a few straggling
pale blue feathers. When they have entered on their second year, these young
birds become spotted with deeper blue on some parts of the body, or on the head
and neck, thus appearing singularly patched with that colour and pure white,
the former increasing with the age of the bird in so remarkable a manner, that
you may see specimens of these birds with portions even of the pendent feathers
of their head or shoulders so marked. And these are produced by full moultings,
by which I mean the unexpected appearance, as it were, of feathers growing out
of the skin of the bird coloured entirely blue, as is the case in many of our
land birds. In all these stages of plumage, and from the first spring after
birth, the young birds breed with others, as is equally the case with Ardea
rufescens. You may see a pure white individual paired with one of a full blue
colour, or with one patched with blue and white. The young, after leaving their
parents, remain separate from the old birds until the next breeding season.
At no period can the young of this species be confounded with, or mistaken for
that of the Ardea candidissima, by a person really acquainted with these birds,
for the Blue Heron is not only larger than the latter, but the very colour of
its feet and legs is perfectly distinctive. Indeed, during the time when the
young Blue Heron is quite white (excepting on the tips of the outer primaries)
it would be easier to confound it with the young of the Reddish Egret, Ardea
rufescens, than with that of any other, were the feathers of its hind head and
neck of the same curious curled appearance as those of that species.
My friend John BACHMAN informs me, that in South Carolina, this species not
unfrequently breeds in the company of the Louisiana Heron, the nests and eggs
of which, he adds, are very similar. He has specimens of these birds in all
the different stages which I have described. At New Orleans, the Blue Herons,
during the transition of their plumage from white to blue, are called "Egrettes
folles," or foolish Enrets, on account of their unusual tameness. My friend
BACHMAN and I, shot, on the 6th and 9th of April, several specimens spotted
with blue feathers, and having their crests and trains similarly mixed, although
of full length; but in most of the specimens obtained, the white was still prevalent.
I have shot some in Louisiana, in autumn, in the same curious dress.
This species, though larger than the Snowy Heron, Ardea calididissima, is considerably
inferior to it in courage; and I was much amused as well as surprised, when
at Galveston Bay, on the 24th of April, 1837, to see one of that species alight
near a Purple Heron, attack it, and pursue it as far as I could follow them
with my eyes. When the Blue Herons are on the seacoast they not unfrequently
repose on the large mud or sand bars, at some distance from the adjacent marshes;
but they generally prefer roosting on trees or bushes, when there are any in
their neighbourhood. The Creoles of Louisiana not unfrequently eat the flesh
of this species, and although they by no means consider it equal to that of
the Night Heron, some of them have assured me that it is not bad food. Like
other birds of this family, they become larger with age, and the male is usually
somewhat superior in size to the female; but, with this exception, no difference
can be perceived in the external appearance of the sexes.
BLUE HERON, Ardea cocrulea, Wil,. Amer. Orn., vol. vii. p. 117.
ARDEA COERULEA, Bonap. Syn., p. 300.
BLUE HERON, Nutt. Man., vol. ii. p. 58.
BLUE HERON, Ardea ecerulea, Aud. Orn. Biog., vol. iv. p. 58.
Male, 24 1/2, 42.
Resident in Florida and Texas, where it breeds. In spring migrates as far as
Long Island; up the Mississippi to a hundred miles above Natchez. Never seen
far inland.
Adult Male, in full plumage.
Bill much longer than the head, rather slender, very slightly decurved, compressed,
tapering to a point. Upper mandible with the dorsal line nearly straight for
two-thirds of its length, then slightly decurved, the ridge convex, broad at
the base, gradually narrowed to the point; a groove from the base to near the
end, the sides convex beneath, the edges thin and sharp, with a slight notch
close to the tips. Nostrils basal, linear, longitudinal, with a membrane above
and behind. Lower mandible with the angle extremely narrow and elongated, the
dorsal line beyond it ascending and almost straight, the sides sloping outwards,
and flattened, the edges sharp and slightly inflected, the tip acuminate.
Head rather small, oblong, compressed. Neck very long and slender. Body slender
and compressed. Feet very long; tibia elongated, its lower half bare, very slender,
covered all round with angular scales, of which the posterior are large; tarsus
elongated, slender, compressed, anteriorly covered with numerous broad scutella,
laterally and behind with angular scales. Toes long, slender, with numerous
broad scutella above, flattened and reticularly granulate beneath. Claws rather
long, arched, compressed, acute, that of hind toe much larger and more curved,
the inner edge of that of the third finely and regularly pectinate.
Space between the bill and eye, and around the latter, bare. Plumage soft, thin,
and blended. Feathers of the upper and hind part of the head very long, linear,
with loose barbs; of the sides of the neck loose and inclined obliquely backwards,
of its lower part much elongated, narrow, and tapering to a point; of the middle
of the back extremely long, linear, acuminate, their tips projecting about five
inches beyond the tail. Wings long and very broad; primaries broad, tapering,
and rounded, the first, second and third almost equal, the latter being only
a twelfth of an inch longer; secondaries broad and rounded; some of the inner
only half an inch shorter than the longest primary, when the wing is closed.
Tail very short, small, even, of twelve rather weak feathers.
Bill ultramarine blue at the base, gradually shaded into black towards the point;
the bare space between it and the eye, as well as the edges of the eyelids,
ultramarine. Iris pale yellow. Legs, tarsi, toes, and claws, black. Head and
neck of a rich deep purple, inclining to vinaceous; the lower part of the neck
and all the other parts deep greyish-blue, the edges of the feathers lighter.
Length to end of tail 24 1/2 inches, to end of wings 25, to end of elongated
dorsal feathers 26 1/2, to end of claws 30 3/4; wing from flexure 11 1/2; tail
4 2/12; extent of wings 42; bill along the ridge 3 4/12, along the edge of lower
mandible 4; bare part of tibia 2 2/12; tarsus 3 5/12; first toe 11/12, its claw
9/12; middle toe 2 1/4, its claw 7/12. Weight 1 lb.
The Female is similar to the male, but smaller. Weight 1 oz.
The young are at first sparely covered with yellowish-white down. When a fortnight
old, the bill is yellow, with the tips greenish-black; the feet greenish-yellow,
the claws dusky, with the tips greyish-yellow. The general colour of the plumage
is pure white, but the down which tips the feathers of the head is brownish-white;
two of the alular feathers are tinged with dull bluish-grey, and the outer seven
or eight primaries are broadly margined on both sides to the length of about
an inch and a half with the same colour of a deeper tint, the extreme tip white.
When fully fledged, the bare parts at the base of the bill, and the basal half
of the upper mandible, are light greenish-blue, the rest black; the lower mandible
yellow, with a patch of black an inch and a quarter in length on each side at
the end. Legs, tarsi, and toes greenish-blue, the sides yellowish; claws dusky.
The feathers of the head are slightly elongated; those of the back are also
elongated, but much broader and shorter than in the adult. The feathers on the
upper part of the head are of a faint bluish-grey; and the alular feathers and
eight outer primaries are tinged with the same colour. At this period, the length
to the end of the tail is 22 inches, to end of claws 28 1/2; bill along the
ridge 2 7/8; wing from flexure 11; tail 4 2/12.
In November, when the moult is advanced. The bill is black, dull blue at the
base. The feet are nearly black, as are the claws. The occipital feathers are
now two inches and a half in length, and some of the dorsal feathers extend
as far as the tips of the wings; those of the lower part of the neck have also
a length of about three inches. The general colour of the plumage is white;
the upper part of the head, the hind neck, back, anterior edge of the wing,
and outer primaries at the end, of a faint bluish-grey tint; some of the elongated
feathers of the back darker.
Length to end of tail 22 inches; to end of claws 29 1/2; bill 3; wing from flexure
11 1/4.
A year old. Bill nearly as in the adult; feet bluish-black, the plumage is white,
with the upper parts pale greyish-blue as in November, but the whole interspersed
with numerous feathers of a deep greyish-blue, similar to that of the adult;
the primaries and tail being still white.
Length to end of tail 23 1/4; extent of wings 32 1/2; bill 3 1/8. Weight 9 oz.
At the age of a year the bird propagates, so that individuals in the white,
mottled, or blue plumage, may be seen breeding together.
When only a few weeks old, the serrature of the claw of the middle toe is scarcely
perceptible, exhibiting merely faint indications of points upon a very slight
margin. This margin enlarges, and when the bird is completely fledged the serratures
are perfectly formed.
In this bird, as in most other Herons, the crura of the lower mandible are thin,
flexible, and elastic, the angle filled by an elastic membrane covered by the
skin. The tongue is 1 inch long, sagittate at the base, tapering to a point.
The roof of the mouth has a median prominent ridge, and two lateral lines; the
palate is convex; the posterior aperture of the nares 10 lines in length. The
pharynx may be dilated to 1 1/2 inches; the oesophagus, which is 12 inches long,
is, when dilated, 10 lines in diameter at its upper part, and gradually contracts
to 7 lines; at the curvature of the neck it lies directly behind, having passed
down on the left side, along with the trachea. Its walls are extremely thin,
contrasting in this respect with the oesophagus of the Great Northern Diver
and other swimming piscivorous birds. The proventriculus is 1 inch long, its
glandules cylindrical, and extremely slender. The stomach seems as if it merely
formed a basal sac to the oesophagus, its muscles being extremely thin, its
tendons circular and half an inch in diameter; cuticular lining soft. The intestine
is long and very narrow, 5 feet 10 inches in length, 2 lines in diameter at
the upper part, 1 near the rectum, which is 2 3/4 inches long, with a diameter
of 4 1/2 lines, and terminates in a nipple-like coecum, projecting 3 lines beyond
the entrance of the small intestine, but having no appearance of the two lateral
appendages usually called coeca. In this respect, the Blue Heron agrees with
others of the same family. The cloaca is about an inch in length and breadth.
The trachea, when extended, is 8 3/4 inches long. The rings 170 in number, are
osseous and circular, so that the organ preserves its cylindrical form under
all circumstances. They are, like those of all Herons, of equal breadth on both
sides, not broad on one side and narrow on the other, as has been represented.
The contractor muscles are very slender, as are the sterno-tracheal; the former
send down a slip on each side to the first bronchial ring. The diameter of the
trachea is 2 lines at the upper part, 1 1/2 at the lower. The bronchi are short,
wide, conical, of about 13 half rings.
The right lobe of the liver is 2 1/4 inches long, the left lobe 1 1/2; the heart
1 1/4 in length, 8 lines broad, of an oblong conical form. The stomach contained
remains of insects and crustaceous animals, together with a few seeds.