Skip to main content
648 Featured Specimen
Cattle egret

Details

Cattle egret

Bubulcus ibis

Size
46–56 cm · 270–512 g
Diet
Carnivore
Activity
Diurnal
Sociality
Loose group
Lifespan

A small white heron often seen around livestock, catching insects flushed by hooves and showing buff plumes in breeding season.

Range

Habitat range map
Native range Occasional / Transient
PalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticPalearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNearcticNeotropicalNeotropicalNeotropicalNeotropicalNeotropicalNeotropicalNeotropicalNeotropicalAfrotropicalAfrotropicalAfrotropicalAfrotropicalIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanIndomalayanAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasianAustralasian

Map: Ecoregions 2017 © RESOLVE (CC BY 4.0) · Natural Earth (PD)

Details

Habitat

Uses grassland, farmland, pastures, damp open ground, and towns, often gathering around livestock or farm machinery.

Appearance

The body is white with a yellow bill. Breeding birds show buff-orange plumes on the head, breast, and back.

Behavior

It walks near cattle or horses and snaps up insects disturbed by movement. Flocks gather at roosts and colonies.

Feeding

Grasshoppers, beetles, flies, and other insects dominate the diet, with frogs, small reptiles, and small fish also eaten.

Reproduction

Colonies nest in trees near water, often mixed with other herons and egrets.

Notes

Originally African, it spread widely through natural dispersal and a strong ability to use human-modified habitats.