Though the smallest of the pelican family, it is still an impressively large bird with an average wing-span of 6-8 feet (2-2½ meters), and weighing in at 6-12 pounds (3-5½ kg).
There are five subspecies:
P. o. californicus (California Brown Pelican)
P. o. carolinensis (Eastern Brown Pelican)
P. o. occidentalis (Caribbean Brown Pelican)
P. o. murphy (Pacific Brown Pelican)
P. o. urinator (Galápagos Brown Pelican)
Galápagos Brown Pelican
My family and I were most fortunate to see brown pelicans nesting during our trip to the Galápagos Islands in 2007. There are about a dozen nests on this beachfront hillside…
…with a million dollar view of the Pacific Ocean which they shared with the Galápagos Fur Seals:
These two nest mates got the penthouse:
As most animals we encountered in the Galápagos Islands, they were completely unperturbed by our presence. Touching was strictly forbidden but we were allowed to approach an animal provided we did not change their behavior:
They have a transparent third eyelid called the nictitating membrane:
The juveniles were brown all over. This one was drying his wings in his nest:
California Brown Pelican
Last month, I went to Carmel with my book club for our annual Fall Adventure. We went kayaking in the Elkhorn Slough and saw this flock of white-headed adults and immature all-brown pelicans quietly resting on this rock.
They didn’t seem to mind sharing the space with cormorants:
The weather was perfect for kayaking and wing-drying:
way to make a comeback!!
ReplyDeleteyou have some wonderful pelican images. Such great fun to see them nesting as well. Even though I lived around them in S.Ca. I never saw where they nest.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the tip about jpg mag. I am not familiar with the site but will take a peak.
OMG- Those pelican shots are precious! I'm always happy to hear when animals are no longer endangered. (Love the seal photos, too!)
ReplyDeleteWhat a fantastic series of photos for the bird lover..like me..
ReplyDeleteThree cheers for Dutchbaby and her pelican photos!!
ReplyDeleteHow beautiful, and ungainly. Can you imagine being a pelican's mother?
ReplyDeleteI love them.
I didn't know they had been endangered. You have a nice collection of Pelican photos here! Beautiful!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the beautiful pics of these pelicans. One of my friends lives at ocean front, and i took some pics there, only I couldn't come as close to the pelicans on the rocks.
ReplyDelete1972 - wow, it took that long to not become endangered anymore! We people sometimes reak (spelling?) havoc with nature in our pursuit to "clean up" things.
Dear margie,
ReplyDeletePretty nice to have some good news once in a while, isn't it?
Dear Tammie Lee,
I had never seen pelican nests until I saw them in the Galapagos Islands.
I hope your beautiful photos do well in JPEG magazine; I think they will.
Dear Gel,
Thanks! It was one of those magical afternoons when the lighting was just so.
Dear ramblingwoods,
I'm so glad you enjoyed them.
Dear Ruth,
Why thanks!
Dear Red Shoes,
I can't imagine setting up house in a house of twigs and branches. Even though my loved one brought these branches to me, one by one, as tokens of affection.
Dear lisaschaos,
I frankly didn't know it either until I heard it on the news this week.
Dear jeannette stgermain,
I only got close to them at the Galapagos Islands, where all the animals we saw were not conditioned to fear man.
I think the spelling you're looking for is "wreak".
Isn't it so exciting what people can accomplish when we decide to work together and show compassion?
ReplyDeleteSo true, Relyn!
ReplyDelete