Here's a real cutie! Do you know what it is?It is a Shoebill Stork, common name for a large (up to 54 in./122 cm) tall, storklike bird, Balaeniceps rex. Also known as the whalehead, it is noted for its large head and unusually long and wide, many-colored bill, which ends in a hooked tip. It has broad wings and long, strong legs with large, unwebbed feet. A solitary, silent bird, the shoebill stork is native to the marshy banks of the papyrus swamps of the East African White Nile and its tributaries, where it feeds on a diet of frogs, small crocodiles, and especially lungfish and other mud puddle fish. It obtains this diet by probing the mud with its bootlike bill. Partially nocturnal, it tends to be sluggish but is nonetheless a strong flyer and soarer. In several respects, shoebills are similar to herons, e.g., they fly with their heads and necks folded back. A ground nester, the shoebill deposits its one or two chalky white eggs in a nest of grasses on a high, dry spot, where its downy young remain, helpless for some time after hatching. Shoebills are classified in the phylum
Chordata , subphylum Vertebrata, class Aves, order Ciconiiformes, family Balaenicipitidae. If you think I wrote all that, I didn't. I found the information at
http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1E1-shoebill.html
This Shoebill is special because my son took the picture last weekend while floating down the Nile in a boat with his wife, Andra, and several other friends. This particular guy was 5ft. tall.
It made a big impression on everyone who saw him. Look here for the pictures of their entire boat trip.
http://picasaweb.google.com/richardmmeyer/TheBeautyOfAfricaLet me just say, there was a storm during this trip and everyone got wet!!! It was a fine African rain!!
2 comments:
Oh my that bird looks prehistoric. Amazing.
It hardly looks real; it's like something made for the movie Jurassic Park.
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