Grande Aigrette
When I was a young child, this species was called the American Egret, and I only knew of it as in image in books and movies. It seemed so exotic, and I thought of it always occurring in dark, mysterious southern swamps. But since then I have seen it countless times in every imaginable habitat and in various parts of the world. In fact, it has increasingly become more and more common here in Ontario and now occurs quite regularly each summer within a relatively short walk from my home. About ten years ago I photographed one in California that, when standing upright, had filmy plumes on its back that were long enough to touch the ground. The photograph is terrible, but it formed the basis for this painting, except that I put it in a dark swamp, as a tribute to my childhood imagination. But I didn’t put it in a southern swamp, with cypress knees sticking out of the water and Spanish moss hanging gracefully in the background…I made up a generic swamp that could be almost anywhere. Those long plumes are only worn in the breeding season, when they are utilized in spectacular displays, and then are molted. I also referenced a museum specimen from the state of Georgia, shot late in the 19th century, when that fate befell a great many of these egrets, and their smaller relatives, the Snowy Egret, almost wiping them out, at least in North America. Those breeding plumes were used for decorations on ladies’ hats and other clothing, and there was an enormous trade in them and in many other kinds of feathers. Conservation can work, and when the species was protected it slowly increased its numbers and is once more common. Great Egrets, also called “Great White Egret”, are found on every continent except Antarctica. I have shown the race found in the western hemisphere, from southern Canada south through nearly all the continental U.S., Mexico, Central American and the West Indies, to southern South America. The painting is in acrylics on compressed hardboard. Barry
  • Garceta grande
  • garça-branca-grande
  • Silberreiher
  • Ardea alba
  • Pelecaniformes

L'espèce

Classification

Ordre : Pélécaniformes
Famille : Ardéidés
Espèce : Grande Aigrette

Répartition par pays


Photos de l'espèce


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La photo

Réf. O.Net : bkma98027
Auteur :

Prise de vue


Pays : Canada (ca)
Région : Ontario
Lieu : Voltaire Lake Voltaire Lake
Lat. : 49° 42' 0'' Nord
Lng. : 89° 13' 18'' Ouest

Données Exif [+] [-]



Modèle : Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XT

Vitesse : 1/1600 s

ouverture : 4.5


Focale : 34 mm


Iso : 100


Flash : non