Illustrated Louisiana Checklist Page 2

Anatidae • Cathartidae • Accipitridae • Falconidae • Phasianidae • Rallidae • Gruidae

This list contains pictures of birds found on the official Louisiana Checklist. These birds were photographed within the state except where noted. Birds marked with an asterisk (*) are currently on the review list of the Louisiana Bird Records Committee.

ORDER ANSERIFORMES

Family Anatidae: Swans, Geese and Ducks



Fulvous Whistling-Duck
Black-Bellied Whistling-Duck
Tundra Swan*
Trumpeter Swan (Q)*
Greater White-Fronted Goose
Snow Goose
Ross' Goose
Brant*
Canada Goose
Wood Duck


Green-Winged Teal
American Black Duck
Mottled Duck
Mallard
Northern Pintail
Blue-Winged Teal
Cinnamon Teal


Northern Shoveler
Gadwall
Eurasian Wigeon*
American Wigeon
Canvasback
Redhead
Ring-Necked Duck

Adult Male Closeup

 Head Viewed From Directly In Front
 
Head Viewed From Directly Behind

 

Greater Scaup

Greater Scaups are greatly outnumbered by Lessers in Louisiana, but in any large flock of Lessers, a Greater or two can often be found.

Overall Size: The larger size of Greater Scaups are usually good indicators of their presence in a flock of Lessers, although size within each species is variable. As hens are generally smaller than drakes, a female scaup larger than nearby drake Lesser Scaups is a good candidate for Greater.

Size and Shape of Head and Neck: The size difference also translates into different overall proportions. Greater Scaups have thick, long necks, with much wider sides of the head than Lessers. Seen from directly behind or in front (see comparative photos below), the heads of Lessers seem "pinched-in" along the eyelines. From the same angles, the heads of Greaters seem much less diminutive, and seem to bulge along the eyelines. In profile at rest, the crowns of Greaters are also rounder, compared to the more sculpted, peaked shape of Lessers. Another way of thinking of the difference in head shape is that the heads of Greaters are shaped like those of Redheads, while Lessers' heads are shaped more likeRing-necked Ducks. The difference in proportions is the best means of separating these two species.

Head Color in Males: The difference in the colors of the iridescence on the heads of male scaup is often dismissed as being too variable, but certainly when seen in direct comparison from similar angles the color provides a good clue. Lessers do show a green sheen at times, but in good lighting a purple gloss is usually apparent. Greaters in good light show a strong green sheen.

Size, Shape and Pattern of Bills: Greaters have a much stouter bill, deeper and wider at the base than the bills of Lessers. The shape of the nail also differs between species; in Greater, the nail is much wider. On Greater, the black of the nail often spreads out along the front edge of the bill, making the dark nail area visible at great range. Noted birder Laurie Binford believes that the greater area of black around the nail is a valid fieldmark for Greater Scaup.

Wing Pattern: The whitish flash running down the bases of the flight feathers generally extends down to the outer primaries in Greaters, and stops on the inner primaries in Lessers. However, there is often a hint of the Greater's pattern in many Lessers, though usually in a more subdued gray from the middle to the outer primaries.



Adult Male Portrait
Lesser Scaup
Lesser Scaup are abundant winterers in Louisiana, often seen by the tens of thousands offshore, and found in good numbers in deeper ponds inland as well.


King Elder*
Oldsquaw
​Black Scoter
Surf Scoter
White-Winged Scoter*
Common Goldeneye
Bufflehead
Hooded Merganser
Common Merganser*
Red-Breasted Merganser
Ruddy Duck
Masked Duck*
 ORDER FALCONIFORMES

 Family Cathartidae: American vultures

Black Vulture
Turkey Vulture

 Family Accipitridae: Kites, Eagles, Hawks and Allies

Osprev
Swallow-Tailed Kite

White-Tailed Kite
Mississippi Kite
Bald Eagle
Northern Harrier
Sharp-Shinned Hawk
Cooper's Hawk
Northern Goshawk*
Red-Shouldered Hawk
Broad-Winged Hawk
Swainson's Hawk

White-Tailed Hawk*
The White-tailed Hawk is of casual occurence only in Louisiana, having been reliably recorded from the state only 4 times: Nov. 18, 1888, Calcasieu Parish. (imm., specimen); Jan. 19, 1972, Bastrop, Morehouse Parish, (sight record only); Dec. 1995-Jan.? 1996 (subadult, documented with photos, etc.), and Dec. 1996 (the individual portrayed here - almost certainly the same bird as the previous winter), adult bird, near a landfill near Welsh, Jeff Davis Parish. These individuals presumably wandered to the state from Texas, the nearest point in their breeding range to Louisiana. Before the destruction of the vast coastal prairies of Louisiana, this species' breeding range might conceivably have included the southwestern part of this state.
Harris' Hawk
Zone-Tailed Hawk*

Red-Tailed Hawk

Ferruginous Hawk*
Rough-Legged Hawk*
Golden Eagle*

 Family Falconidae: Caracaras and Falcons

Crested Caracara*
American Kestrel

Merlin

Peregrine Falcon

 ORDER GALLIFORMES

 Family Phasianidae: Grouse, Turkeys and Quail

Greater Prairie-Chicken (Q)*
Wild Turkey
Northern Bobwhite

 ORDER GRUIFORMES

 Family Rallidae: Rails, Gallinules, and Coots

Yellow Rail
Black Rail*
Clapper Rail
King Rail
Virginia Rail

Sora


Purple Gallinule

Common Moorhen
American Coot

 Family Gruidae: Cranes


Sandhill Crane
Whooping Crane (Q)*