- Home
- About this site
- Birds
- Divers & Grebes
- Petrels & Shearwaters
- Boobies, Gannets & Cormorants
- Bitterns & Herons
- Ibises & Spoonbills
- Wildfowl
- Birds of Prey
- Gamebirds
- Rails, Crakes & Coots
- Waders
- Skuas, Gulls & Terns
- Auks
- Pigeons & Doves
- Owls
- Kingfishers, Bee-eaters, Rollers & Hoopoes
- Woodpeckers & Wrynecks
- Larks
- Swifts, Martins & Swallows
- Pipits & Wagtails
- Wrens, Dippers, Waxwings & Accentors
- Chats & Thrushes
- Warblers & Flycatchers
- Tits & Allies
- Nuthatches & Treecreepers
- Shrikes & Orioles
- Crows & Starlings
- Sparrows
- Finches
- Buntings
- Vagrants & Rarities
- Insects
- Arthropods
- Slugs & Snails
- Mammals
- Reptiles & Amphibians
- Landscapes & Scenes
- My Flickr Gallery
- Useful Links
- Contact us
Bitterns & Herons
Bitterns & Herons
Small to very large. All have long legs with particularly long toes, useful when wading on soft mud or standing on floating vegetation.
Wings are broad and rounded, often markedly bowed in flight, and they all have long or very long, sinuous necks and dagger-shaped bills.
They catch fish and other aquatic creatures by grabbing them in the bill rather than spearing. Many species nest in trees, often in mixed colonies, while bitterns are much more secretive and nest in dense reeds.
There are many other species worldwide.
For more information click here
Text (c) RSPB, used with permission
Small to very large. All have long legs with particularly long toes, useful when wading on soft mud or standing on floating vegetation.
Wings are broad and rounded, often markedly bowed in flight, and they all have long or very long, sinuous necks and dagger-shaped bills.
They catch fish and other aquatic creatures by grabbing them in the bill rather than spearing. Many species nest in trees, often in mixed colonies, while bitterns are much more secretive and nest in dense reeds.
There are many other species worldwide.
For more information click here
Text (c) RSPB, used with permission
- Other galleries:
- Divers & Grebes
- Petrels & Shearwaters
- Boobies, Gannets & Cormorants
- Bitterns & Herons
- Ibises & Spoonbills
- Wildfowl
- Birds of Prey
- Gamebirds
- Rails, Crakes & Coots
- Waders
- Skuas, Gulls & Terns
- Auks
- Pigeons & Doves
- Owls
- Kingfishers, Bee-eaters, Rollers & Hoopoes
- Woodpeckers & Wrynecks
- Larks
- Swifts, Martins & Swallows
- Pipits & Wagtails
- Wrens, Dippers, Waxwings & Accentors
- Chats & Thrushes
- Warblers & Flycatchers
- Tits & Allies
- Nuthatches & Treecreepers
- Shrikes & Orioles
- Crows & Starlings
- Sparrows
- Finches
- Buntings
- Vagrants & Rarities