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Reddish Egrets

To make it easier to picture the reddish egret in the wild, browse the images below.

 

The rarest of the egrets, the reddish egret (egretta rufescens) can be found in the shallow coastal salt water lagoons and estuaries of the Gulf states, Mexico, Central America, the caribbean and the Bahamas. The largest populations of breeding pairs are curently along the coast of Texas.

They are very active foragers, often seen running, jumping and spinning, sometimes with wings outspread, in the pursuit of prey. They will try to herd them into groups to make them easier to catch. They feed on fish, frogs, crustaceans, insects and small animals preferring shallow mud flats, lagoons and saltwater estuaries.

They were almost hunted to extinction late 1800's and early 1900's for their plumes for the fashion industry. They have made somewhat of a comeback but are still very rare as the coastal marine habitat that they favor keeps shrinking bue to development along the coastlines.

The Pose

A reddish egret poses with its wings outstretched in the shallows of the mouth of Tampa Bay, Florida near the Sunshine Skyway Bridge.

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Reddish Egret

This reddish egret was searching the shallows around the Sunshine Skyway Bridge at the mouth of Tampa Bay, Florida for something to eat.

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Reddish Dance

This reddish egret is herding fish in the shallows near the Sunshine Skyway Bridge on Tampa Bay, Florida.

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Reddish

This reddish egret balances on a rail by the Hillsborough River at John Sargeant Park in Tampa, Florida.

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