Guardian Nature School Team Contact Blog Project Noah Facebook Project Noah Twitter

A worldwide community photographing and learning about wildlife

Join Project Noah!
nature school apple icon

Project Noah Nature School visit nature school

Anhinga (Female)

Anhinga anhinga

Description:

Anhinga (Anhinga anhinga) - a female catching and eating a fish at Anhinga Trail, Everglades National Park, Florida. In photo 3, note the bulge in its neck from swallowing the fish. In these images, one can see how they got the name 'Water Turkey'. << The Anhinga sometimes called Snakebird, Darter, American Darter, or Water Turkey, is a water bird of the warmer parts of the Americas. ... Most of the male Anhinga's body is a glossy black green with the wings, base of wings, and tail being a glossy black blue. The tip of the tail has white feathers. The back of the head and the neck have elongated feathers that have been described as gray or light purple white. The upper back of the body and wings is spotted or streaked with white. The bill is long (about twice the length of the head, sharply pointed and yellow as are the webbed feet. The female Anhinga is similar to the male Anhinga except that it has a pale gray-buff or light brown head, neck, and upper chest. The lower chest or breast is a chestnut color and as compared to the male, the female has a more brown back. >>

Habitat:

The Anhinga (Anhinga anhinga), sometimes called Snakebird, Darter, American Darter, or Water Turkey, is a water bird of the warmer parts of the Americas. The word "anhinga" comes from the Brazilian Tupi language and means devil bird or snake bird. It is a cormorant-like bird with an average body length of 85 cm (33 in), a wingspan of 117 cm (46 in), and a mass of 1.35 kg (48 oz). It is a dark-plumaged piscivore with a very long neck, and often swims with only the neck above water. When swimming in this style the name Snakebird is apparent, since only the colored neck appears above water the bird looks like a snake ready to strike. The Anhinga is placed in the darter family, Anhingidae, and is closely related to Indian (Anhinga melanogaster), African (A. rufa), and Australian (A. novaehollandiae) Darters. Unlike ducks, the Anhinga is not able to waterproof its feathers using oil produced by the uropygial gland. Consequently, feathers can become waterlogged, making the bird barely buoyant. However, this allows it to dive easily and search for underwater prey, such as fish and amphibians. It can stay down for significant periods. When necessary, the Anhinga will dry out its wings and feathers, with the resemblance of the semicircular full-spread shape of its group of tail feathers while drying them out, to that of true meleagrine males lending the name "water turkey" to it. It will perch for long periods with its wings spread to allow the drying process, as do cormorants. If it attempts to fly while its wings are wet, it has great difficulty getting off the water and takes off by flapping vigorously while 'running' on the water. Anhinga will often search for food in small groups. Most of the male Anhinga's body is a glossy black green with the wings, base of wings, and tail being a glossy black blue. The tip of the tail has white feathers. The back of the head and the neck have elongated feathers that have been described as gray or light purple white. The upper back of the body and wings is spotted or streaked with white. The bill is long (about twice the length of the head, sharply pointed and yellow as are the webbed feet. The female Anhinga is similar to the male Anhinga except that it has a pale gray-buff or light brown head, neck, and upper chest. The lower chest or breast is a chestnut color and as compared to the male, the female has a more brown back. The hatchling starts out bald but gains tan down within a few days of hatching. Within two weeks the tan down has been replaced by white down. Three weeks after hatching, the first juvenile feathers appear. Juveniles are mostly brown until first breeding after the second or third winter. (credit: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anhinga)

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

4 Comments

JackEng
JackEng 12 years ago

Arun,
Thank you!

Arun
Arun 12 years ago

Awesome ... timing shots

JackEng
JackEng 12 years ago

Nopayahnah,
Thank you! I really enjoy the challenge of watching an Anhinga dive and wondering when and where they'll resurface - and whether they'll have a catch... Successfully capturing the action when they do is the ultimate reward.

Maria dB
Maria dB 12 years ago

very cool series!

JackEng
Spotted by
JackEng

Homestead, Florida, USA

Spotted on Mar 29, 2012
Submitted on Apr 3, 2012

Related Spottings

Anhinga Anhinga Anhinga Anhinga

Nearby Spottings

Little Blue Heron American Purple Gallinule Anhinga Green Heron

Reference

Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team