The Inlet » Natural History » Birds » White-faced heron
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The white-faced heron (Egretta novaehollandiae) is one of the icons of Pāuatahanui Inlet. Its statuesque beauty, with an elegant, even haughty, posture and delicate walk as it searches for its food, makes it so. It is because of this that we have adopted it as the featured animal on our new brochure.
Herons are usually thought of as associated with marine wetlands and estuaries, but they also occur around rivers, freshwater lakes and ponds, and even on pasture land. In Australia they are present everywhere except for the very driest parts of Western Australia. It has been suggested that their explosive spread through inland New Zealand in the 1950s and 60s was aided by the rapid conversion of forest to farmland. The many farm dams established at this time were quickly colonised by the Australian Green Frog, a favourite food of the herons in Australia.
Their ability to live in such varied habitats is founded on their very wide diet of small animals, which includes, for example, crabs, fish and frogs, land insects such as grasshoppers and large flies, and aquatic insects such as dragonflies. Around Pāuatahanui Inlet white-faced herons are most commonly seen fishing for crabs and small fish, which they disturb with their feet as they walk in the shallows. |
Photos on this page courtesy entrants in the Guardians of Pāuatahanui Inlet annual photo competition.
This article first appeared in 'The Inlet', the newsletter of the Guardians of Pāuatahanui Inlet, in December 2012.