
Limpkin Identification, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Tall, long-legged bird of marshes and swampy forests with a long neck and a long and heavy yellowish bill. Brown overall with white spotting on the back and sides. An Apple Snail specialist, Limpkins use their strong decurved bills to pry open these snails before eating them.
Limpkin - Wikipedia
The limpkin (Aramus guarauna), also called carrao, courlan, and crying bird, is a large wading bird related to rails and cranes, and the only extant species in the family Aramidae.
Limpkin | Audubon Field Guide
Looking like something between a crane and a rail, this odd wading bird has no close relatives. It is widespread in the American tropics, but enters our area only in Florida and southern Georgia -- only where it can satisfy its dietary requirement for a certain fresh-water snail.
Limpkin Overview, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
The gangly, brown-and-white Limpkin looks a bit like a giant rail or perhaps a young night-heron. Its long bill is bent and twisted at the tip, an adaptation for removing snails from the shell. Limpkins are tropical wetland birds whose range reaches into Florida.
Limpkin | FWC - Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission
The limpkin is a long-legged species of waterbird that has dark brown feathers with streaks of white on the head and neck and absent on the rest of the body. Limpkins can grow up to 28 inches (71.1 centimeters) long, with a 42 inch (106.7 centimeters) wingspan, and weigh up to 46 ounces (1,304 grams) (The Cornell Lab of Ornithology 2011).
Limpkins Are Everywhere All of the Sudden. What Is Going On?
Long restricted to Florida, the large wading birds have begun popping up across much of the United States and as far north as Canada in a rapid range expansion that has shocked experts. A Limpkin flies over Lake Okeechobee in Florida, long the northern extent of the subtropical species’ range. Photo: Sydney Walsh/Audubon.
Limpkin - eBird
Large heronlike bird, reminiscent of a gangly ibis but more closely related to rails. Brown with white spots and streaks, densest on the head and neck. Long yellowish bill is slightly decurved. Found in marshes or swamps, often with trees and shrubs, but also regularly seen at the edges of ponds in otherwise highly managed city parks.
Limpkin Life History - All About Birds
The gangly, brown-and-white Limpkin looks a bit like a giant rail or perhaps a young night-heron. Its long bill is bent and twisted at the tip, an adaptation for removing snails from the shell. Limpkins are tropical wetland birds whose range reaches into Florida.
Limpkin (Identification, Range, Sound, Facts & More) | Birdzilla
Mar 9, 2023 · These large birds can be spotted in Florida and in Central and South America. What looks like a rail, crane, ibis and heron, and screams like a banshee? Is it a rail-crane-ibis-heron banshee bird? No, it’s a Limpkin (Aramus guarauna), a peculiar wading bird.
Aramidae - Wikipedia
The limpkin (Aramus guarauna) is the only living member of this family, although other species are known from the fossil record, such as Papulavis annae from the Eocene of France, [2] Aramus paludigrus from the Middle Miocene of Colombia [3] and Badistornis aramus from the Oligocene of South Dakota, USA.