The cattle egrets (formerly genus Bubulcus) are a cosmopolitan clade of (family Ardeidae) in the genus Ardea found in the tropics, subtropics, warm temperate, and increasingly in cooler temperate zones. As currently treated, the clade contains two species, the western cattle egret and the eastern cattle egret, although some authorities (particularly in the past) regarded them as a single species. Despite the similarities in plumage to the egrets of the genus Egretta, they have recently been found to be genetically embedded within the genus Ardea, and are now included there. Originally native to parts of Asia, Africa, and southernmost Europe, the two species have undergone rapid expansion in their distribution and have successfully colonised much of the rest of the world in the last century.
They are white birds adorned with buff feather in the breeding season. They nest in bird colony, usually near bodies of water and often with other . The bird nest is a platform of sticks in trees or shrubs. Cattle egrets exploit drier and open habitats more than other heron species. Their feeding habitats include seasonally inundated grasslands, pastures, farmlands, wetlands, and rice paddies. They often Commensalism cattle or other large , catching insect and small vertebrate prey disturbed by these animals. Some populations are bird migration and others show postbreeding dispersal.
Adult cattle egrets have few predators, but birds or mammals may raid their nests, and chicks may be lost to starvation, calcium deficiency, or disturbance from other large birds. Cattle egrets maintain a special relationship with cattle, which extends to other large grazing mammals; increased human livestock farming is believed to be a major cause of their suddenly expanded range. Cattle egrets remove and flies from cattle and consume them. This benefits both organisms, but it has been implicated in the spread of tick-borne animal diseases.
The eastern and western cattle egrets were first split by McAllan and Bruce in 1988, but were regarded as conspecific by almost all other recent authors until the publication of the influential Birds of South Asia. The eastern cattle egret breeds in southern and eastern Asia and Australasia, and the western species occupies the rest of the cattle egret's range, including southwestern Asia, Europe, Africa, and the Americas. According to the IOC birdlist, they are both monotypic species. Some authorities have recognised a third taxon in the Seychelles, A. i. seychellarum, which was first described by Finn Salomonsen in 1934, but this is now considered synonymous with typical A. ibis.
Despite superficial similarities in appearance, the cattle egret is more closely related to the other members of the genus Ardea, which comprises the great or typical herons and the great egret ( A. alba), than to the majority of species termed egrets in the genus Egretta. Rare cases of hybridisation with little blue herons ( Egretta caerulea), ( E. garzetta), and ( E. thula) have been recorded.
An older English name for cattle egrets is buff-backed heron.
The eastern cattle egret differs from the western in breeding plumage, when the buff colour on its head extends to the cheeks and throat, and the plumes are more golden in colour. Its bill and tarsi are longer on average than in A. ibis, though with some overlap.
Individuals with abnormally grey, melanistic plumages have been recorded.
The positioning of their eyes allows for binocular vision during feeding, and physiological studies suggest that they may be capable of crepuscular or nocturnal activity. Adapted to foraging on land, they have lost the ability possessed by their wetland relatives to accurately correct for light refraction by water.
The western cattle egret first arrived in North America in 1941 (these early sightings were originally dismissed as escapees), bred in Florida in 1953, and spread rapidly, breeding for the first time in Canada in 1962. It is now commonly seen as far west as California. It was first recorded breeding in Cuba in 1957, in Costa Rica in 1958, and in Mexico in 1963, although it was probably established before then. In Europe, the species had historically declined in Spain and Portugal, but in the latter part of the 20th century, it expanded back through the Iberian Peninsula, and then began to colonise other parts of Europe, southern France in 1958, northern France in 1981, and Italy in 1985. Breeding in the United Kingdom was recorded for the first time in 2008, only a year after an influx seen in the previous year. In 2008, western cattle egrets were also reported as having moved into Ireland for the first time. This trend has continued and western cattle egrets have become more numerous in southern Britain with influxes in some numbers during the nonbreeding seasons of 2007/08 and 2016/17. They bred in Britain again in 2017, following an influx in the previous winter, and may become established there. Since 1948, western cattle egret has been permanently resident in Israel; prior to 1948, it was only a winter visitor.
The eastern cattle egret has also expanded its range markedly. In Australia, the colonisation began in the 1940s, when they established in the north and east of the continent. It began to regularly visit New Zealand in the 1960s; the species now breeds throughout both countries, except for the drier parts of Australia.
The massive and rapid expansion of the two cattle egret ranges is due to their relationship with humans and their domesticated animals. Originally adapted to a commensal relationship with large grazing and browsing animals, it was easily able to switch to domesticated cattle and horses. As the keeping of livestock spread throughout the world, the cattle egret was able to occupy otherwise empty ecological niche. Many populations of cattle egrets are bird migration and dispersive, and this has helped the genus' range expansion. Cattle egrets have been seen as vagrants in various sub-Antarctic islands, including South Georgia, Marion Island, the South Sandwich Islands, and the South Orkney Islands. A small flock of eight birds was also seen in Fiji in 2008.
In addition to the natural expansion of its range, cattle egrets have been deliberately introduced into a few areas. The western cattle egret was introduced to Hawaii in 1959, and to the Chagos Archipelago in 1955. Successful releases were also made in the Seychelles and Rodrigues, but attempts to introduce them to Mauritius failed. Numerous birds were also released by Whipsnade Zoo in England, but they never became established.
Although cattle egrets sometimes feed in shallow water, unlike most herons, they are typically found in fields and dry grassy habitats, reflecting its greater dietary reliance on terrestrial insects rather than aquatic prey.
Young birds are known to disperse up to from their breeding area. Flocks may fly vast distances and have been seen over seas and oceans including in the middle of the Atlantic.
The male displays in a tree in the colony, using a range of behaviour, such as shaking a twig and sky-pointing (raising his bill vertically upwards), and the pair forms over 3–4 days. A new mate is chosen in each season and when renesting following nest failure. The nest is a small, untidy platform of sticks in a tree or shrub constructed by both parents. Sticks are collected by the male and arranged by the female, and stick-stealing is rife. The clutch size can be one to five eggs, although three or four is most common. The pale bluish-white eggs are oval-shaped and measure . Avian incubation lasts around 23 days, with both sexes sharing incubation duties. The chicks are partly covered with down feather at hatching, but are Nidicolous; they become capable of Thermoregulation at 9–12 days and are fully feathered in 13–21 days. They begin to leave the nest and climb around at 2 weeks, fledge at 30 days and become independent at around the 45th day.
Cattle egrets engage in low levels of brood parasitism, and a few instances have been reported of cattle egret eggs being laid in the nests of and little blue herons, although these eggs seldom hatch. Also, evidence of low levels of intraspecific brood parasitism has been found, with females laying eggs in the nests of other cattle egrets. As much as 30% extra-pair copulations has been noted.
The dominant factor in nesting mortality is starvation. Sibling rivalry can be intense, and in South Africa, third and fourth chicks inevitably starve. In the dryer habitats with fewer amphibians, the diet may lack sufficient vertebrate content and may cause bone abnormalities in growing chicks due to calcium deficiency. In Barbados, nests were sometimes raided by , and a study in Florida reported the fish crow and black rat as other possible nest raiders. The same study attributed some nestling mortality to nesting in the vicinity, which accidentally, but frequently, dislodged nests or caused nestlings to fall. In Australia, , wedge-tailed eagles, and white-bellied sea eagles take eggs or young, and tick infestation and virus infections may also be causes of mortality.
A cattle egret will weakly defend the area around a grazing animal against others of the same species, but if the area is swamped by egrets, it will give up and continue foraging elsewhere. Where numerous large animals are present, cattle egrets selectively forage around species that move at around 5–15 steps per minute, avoiding faster and slower moving herds; in Africa, cattle egrets selectively forage behind , waterbuck, blue wildebeest and Cape buffalo. Dominant birds feed nearest to the host, and thus obtain more food.
Cattle egrets sometimes show versatility in their diet. On islands with seabird colony, it will prey on the eggs and chicks of and other . During bird migration, it has also been reported to eat exhausted migrating landbirds. Birds on the Seychelles also indulge in some kleptoparasitism, chasing the chicks of and forcing them to disgorge food.
Cattle egrets are an occurring traditional motif in fishing boats among fishermen of the Malay Peninsula east coast who believed them as a symbol of good luck and fortune.
Cattle egrets are popular birds with cattle for their perceived role as a biocontrol of cattle such as and fly. A study in Australia found that cattle egrets reduced the number of flies that bothered cattle by pecking them directly off the skin. It was the benefit to stock that prompted ranchers and the Hawaiian Board of Agriculture and Forestry to release the western cattle egret in Hawaii.
Not all interactions between humans and cattle egrets are beneficial. The cattle egret can be a safety hazard to aircraft due to its habit of feeding in large groups in the grassy verges of airports, and it has been implicated in the spread of animal infections such as heartwater, infectious bursal disease, and possibly Newcastle disease.
Description
Distribution and habitat
Migration and movements
Ecology and behaviour
Voice
Breeding
Feeding
Threats
Status
Relationship with humans
External links
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