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Great Egret (also known as Common Egret, Great White Heron, or Large Egret)
Semiplume / Down feather

Great Egret (also known as Common Egret, Great White Heron, or Large Egret)

Kingdom: Animalia, Phylum: Chordata, Class: Aves, Order: Pelecaniformes, Family: Ardeidae, Genus: Ardea, Species: Ardea alba

Family: Ardeidae (Herons, Egrets, and Bitterns)

Shape
Amorphous and filamentous with a plumulaceous (downy) structure; no defined vane outline.
Size
Approximately 2 to 3.5 inches in length. This is consistent with the size of body down or semiplume feathers found on large Ardeidae species.
Rarity
Common; populations have recovered significantly since the early 20th century.
Learn more about Great Egret (also known as Common Egret, Great White Heron, or Large Egret) in the encyclopedia →

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Description

These are the delicate white down feathers of the Great Egret, a large wading bird with all-white plumage, a long S-curved neck, and a yellow bill. In flight, they are slow and graceful, tucking their necks back. These feathers provide the thermal insulation required for birds that spend long hours standing in water.

Colour & Pattern

Pure snowy white throughout. No markings, bands, or iridescence are present, which is diagnostic for this species even in downy feathers.

Barb Structure

Plumulaceous; the barbs are long, flexible, and lack the interlocking barbules (hamuli) found in pennaceous flight feathers, resulting in a fuzzy appearance.

Texture & Surface

Extremely soft, silky, and lightweight. It lacks the stiffness of flight feathers and has a matte, airy finish.

Key Features

Pure white color, plumulaceous (downy) structure, and size relative to large waterfowl or waders.

Habitat

Freshwater and saltwater wetlands, marshes, ponds, shores of lakes and rivers, and mudflats.

Geographic Range

Globally distributed; found throughout the Americas, Europe, Africa, Asia, and Oceania. In North America, they breed in seasonal wetlands and migrate to southern coastal regions for winter.

Ecological Role

Top-tier aquatic predator; controls populations of fish, amphibians, and invertebrates. Sensitive to water quality, making them good environmental indicators.

Similar Species

Snowy Egret (Ardea thula) feathers are smaller; Tundra Swan (Cygnus columbianus) down is denser and more compact.

Interesting Facts

The Great Egret is the symbol of the National Audubon Society, chosen because the species was hunted nearly to extinction in the late 19th century for its feathers (plumes) used in ladies' hats.

Condition Notes

Good condition; the feathers appear freshly molted with minimal staining or debris, though naturally 'disordered' due to their downy structure.

Great Egret (also known as Common Egret, Great White Heron, or Large Egret) | Feather Identifier