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

Snow Goose

Chen caerulescens

Description:

The best analysis I have heard of spotting a flock of snow geese is that you feel like you are standing in a snow storm. This flock was spotted on the eastern shore of the Salton Sea, and had to have numbered in the thousands...note the last photo above. These birds are all white, except for dark markings on the end third of the wings, see first photo above.

Habitat:

This flock was spotted on a fallow agricultural area adjacent to a wetland at the Salton Sea. This area is a part of their wintering habitat. According to the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, snow geese breed in colonies from the the high arctic to sub-arctic in Canadan and Alaskan tundra areas. Per the Cornell Lab of Ornithology..."they choose areas near ponds, shallow lakes, coastal salt marshes, or streams (including river islands), preferring rolling terrain that loses its snow early and escapes flooding during spring thaw."

Notes:

Snow geese have increased their population size over time, and are not considered endangered. Per the Cornell Lab of Ornithology..."Snow Geese form three separate regional populations—eastern, central, and western—distinctions that are more or less preserved as the geese migrate to their wintering grounds...During spring and fall migration along all four major North American flyways, geese frequently stop in open areas like lakes, farm fields, protected freshwater and brackish marshes, sluggish rivers, and sandbars. They winter in regions on both American coasts as well as in some inland areas, frequenting open habitats like marshes, grasslands, marine inlets, freshwater ponds, and agricultural fields." My best advice when photographing large flocks of snow geese...take an umbrella!

Species ID Suggestions



Sign in to suggest organism ID

5 Comments

Jim Nelson
Jim Nelson 8 years ago

Ashley, and to those involved...Thanks for the Nomination!

AshleyT
AshleyT 8 years ago

Your spotting has been nominated for the Spotting of the Week. The winner will be chosen by the Project Noah Rangers based on a combination of factors including: uniqueness of the shot, status of the organism (for example, rare or endangered), quality of the information provided in the habitat and description sections. There is a subjective element, of course; the spotting with the highest number of Ranger votes is chosen. Congratulations on being nominated!

Jim Nelson
Jim Nelson 8 years ago

Thanks Ava!

CalebSteindel
CalebSteindel 8 years ago

OK...I mean, SOTD anyone?

Ava T-B
Ava T-B 8 years ago

Thanks for the beautiful pictures and complete notes and references!

Jim Nelson
Spotted by
Jim Nelson

California, USA

Spotted on Jan 27, 2016
Submitted on Feb 15, 2016

Related Spottings

Emperor Goose Pigeon Chen Unnamed spotting

Nearby Spottings

Western Pygmy Blue Great Blue Heron Black-necked Stilt Eared Grebe
Noah Guardians
Noah Sponsors
join Project Noah Team

Join the Project Noah Team