Pelicans Diving
by Paul Rebmann
Title
Pelicans Diving
Artist
Paul Rebmann
Medium
Photograph - Photograph
Description
A photograph of two brown pelicans diving towards the ocean, with another flying past and a fourth floating on the water. This image was made along the Atlantic Coast of Florida in Volusia County.
This image has been featured in the following groups:
Birds in Flight
& Wildlife ONE A DAY
A large dark bird found mostly near the coast throughout Florida. The range extends through the Gulf coastal states and up the eastern coast into the mid-Atlantic states in summer. Also in southern California and the Baja region of Mexico plus Central America and the Pacific coast of South America from Ecuador to Chile.
Brown pelicans are the only dark pelican and also the only pelican that feeds by plunging into the water to catch fish. They have a large heavy mostly gray body with a very short tail, short legs and webbed feet. The long heavy beak has a pouch underneath. Adult non-breeding birds have a white head and neck, breeding adults have rich dark brown nape and neck. Atlantic & Gulf birds have a dark gray to brown pouch year round, while along the Pacific the pouch is olive becoming red during breeding season. The South American pelicans have a blue pouch in breeding plumage. Juveniles are dirty brown all over except for a white belly.
The digestive system of pelicans is adapted for fish that pelicans can swallow whole. They cannot digest larger fish bones, such as the filleted fish carcass or other parts of sport fish. These larger bones can lodge in their throat or become septic in the stomach and kill the bird. You should never feed or allow pelicans to eat scraps from cleaning fish. Not only is it a bad idea, it is now illegal in Florida.
(Subject description from the artist's Wild Florida Photo website www.wildflphoto.com)
Uploaded
August 14th, 2014
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Viewed 1,493 Times - Last Visitor from New York, NY on 04/25/2024 at 4:53 PM
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