Birds of the Gulf Coast
Discover the hidden gem of birdwatching along the Gulf Coast — where turquoise waters and diverse wildlife provide the ideal setting for your next outdoor excursion! Learn more about some of the Gulf Coast birds you'll see on your next vacation.
The Gulf Coast’s emerald-blue surf, sparkling beaches, sunny skies, balmy temperatures, gentle ocean breezes, fresh seafood, and abundant fishing, boating, and water-sports opportunities beckon vacationers back year after year.
Sometimes month after month. Even week after week.
There’s another attraction that might not make many top-10 lists at first blush, but with a deeper dive, could easily make top-fives.
It’s birdwatching.
Whether seeing birds of the Gulf Coast fly gracefully over the water, plunge dramatically into the surf, forage gingerly in shallow waters, skittle lightly across sand, or vocalize in various voices, there’s a lot to enjoy watching our feathered friends.
Every avian species has its own distinct colors, songs, nesting habits, dietary preferences and other characteristics providing a plethora of opportunities for birding enjoyment.
Consider this. There generally are two pools of birds that reside in the Gulf Coast area—permanent residents and migratory visitors. That means scores of species live along the coast year round, plus more than 300 additional species pass through twice yearly.
Some more-common permanent residents include eastern brown pelicans, gulls, bald eagles, great blue herons, ospreys, least terns, egrets, double-breasted cormorants, anhingas, roseate spoonbills, white ibises, black skimmers, oystercatchers, rock pigeons, and more.
Majestic and Iconic: The Eastern Brown Pelican - A Coastal Wonder
A pair of brown pelicans relaxing at the Gulf Coast
A common bird along the coast is the eastern brown pelican. Once listed as an endangered species, this version of pelican has returned to safe numbers and is thriving. They are smaller than most other pelicans, with adults weighing about eight pounds, body lengths measuring up-to four feet, and wingspans of up-to six-and-a-half feet. Adults are easily recognizable with gray-brown bodies, tall white necks, light-yellow crowns, and long slender gray, brown or orange bills.
If you’ve seen a goose-sized gray-brownish bird plunging headfirst into the surf and arising with its bill pouch stretched full of fish, chances are you were watching an eastern brown pelican. They eat herring, minnows, sheepshead, and other fish, as well as invertebrates and sea crustaceans, consuming up to four pounds daily. They can spot fish from 60 feet away, and plunge into the water at up to 40 miles per hour.
Flocks fly in tandem lines, beating their powerful wings deeply and slowly, then sometimes gliding, and surfing updrafts. They live and nest in colonies and often mate for life. Eastern brown pelicans are not very vocal, although they do emit low, hoarse sounds during wing-jerking displays, and pop their bills loudly when defending their nests.
Meet the Laughing Gull: The Cheerful Coastal Bird of the Gulf Coast
Laughing Gull, Leucophaeus atricilla, standing on a post at a Florida beach
Another common fowl along the Gulf’s plush sandy shoreline is the laughing gull. If you’ve ever visited this coast, chances are you have seen one or 1,000 of these white avians with gray wings, charcoal-black heads, and distinctive red bills skittering along the waterline. Of nine gull species found in Florida, laughing gulls are the only ones that breed in the state.
If you’ve seen a laughing gull, you surely have heard one. Their name says it all as they call out in shrill stuttering squawks, as easily recognizable as laughs, and evoking well-known sounds of summers on the beach.
Laughing gulls’ silhouettes are similar to other gulls’, with plumage setting them apart. They nest in large colonies among beach grasses, and forage for food while walking, wading, or swimming. Like pelicans, they sometimes plunge into the surf for fish. They even will land on pelicans’ heads and snatch fish from their bill pouches. And they often gather and squawk for scraps tossed by beach goers.
Discover the Majestic Great Blue Heron - A Common Coastal Wading Bird With Unique Features and Behaviors
Great Blue Heron on a beach in Florida during the sunset.
Great blue herons are yet another common wading bird beach goers are likely to encounter. Highly distinctive, these long-legged, long-necked, lean-looking fowl stand as tall as four feet, with a six-foot wingspan, and a dagger-like beak. They’re typically dark gray with a white neck, yellowish stalk-like legs, and a black stripe above either eye.
These herons are easy to recognize flying down the coast because their neck stays folded backwards, unlike similar-looking cranes, storks, ibises, and cormorants, which fly with necks extended forward.
On the ground, they often wade alone in shallows hunting for fish and other aquatic wildlife. They build nests measuring as much as a yard across in tree tops near water. Their calls sound like a guttural “whack” “whack” “whack”.
When it comes to migratory birds, the time-windows during which birders can catch views is more narrow, but the number of birds is plentiful.
Exploring the Gulf Coast's Role in the Majestic Migration of Hundreds of Bird Species
Flying seagull over Destin, Florida
The Alabama and Florida Gulf Coasts are in the Mississippi Flyway, one of North America’s major bird-migration corridors. More than 325 species—including geese, ducks, sparrows, warblers, thrushes, hummingbirds, cardinals, blue jays, a wide variety of shorebirds, and more—annually travel from breeding grounds in the northern United States and Canada to winter along the Gulf of Mexico as well as Central and South America. Then they return north in the spring.
So when beach goers are sunbathing or building castles in the sand, they very likely are smack dab in the middle of scores of creatures fresh off—or bound for—thousands-of-miles flights from or to distant locations.
Next time you are basking in all our beautiful beaches have to offer, you might want to take a look around—and up—to enjoy the vast variety of feathered friends.
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Published on Thursday, May 4, 2023