Search
NEWS

Sandhill Crane Missouri Department of Conservation

By A Mystery Man Writer

Sandhill crane adults are very large and have gray bodies with very long tertial feathers extending and arching into a “bustlelike” cover over their tails. Cranes have a very long neck, red skin on the crown, and a sharp black bill. Frequently the gray body and neck feathers are stained brown by the water in which they forage. In flight, the neck is held straight out. The call is a loud, gurgling or rattling, repeated, hollow wooden sound, gar-oo-oo-oo, which can be heard over a mile away. Similar species: Great blue herons, sometimes mistakenly called cranes, are slightly larger. On the ground, the heron has a short, straight tail and a smooth contour down its back from head to tail; herons do not have the elongated feathers that form the rounded “bustle” on the crane. In flight, the heron curls its neck into an S shape, with its head near its shoulders. Finally, great blue herons usually fly singly, while cranes usually migrate in straight or V-shaped lines like geese.

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

Sandhill Crane - Missouri eBird

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

Crane habitat conservation efforts have flourished in Nebraska under once-novel management plan - Flatwater Free Press

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

Sandhill Crane Audubon Field Guide

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

Sarus cranes and Eleocharis spp. in the Anlung Pring Sarus Crane

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

Rare birds found in Missouri national wildlife refuge

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

Just for the birds: The trumpet in the orchestra of evolution, Community

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

Sandhill crane released at Squaw Creek, Outdoors

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

New Stamps Spotlight Endangered Species; Feature Mississippi sandhill crane - Louisiana newsroom

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

Conservation Federation vol 84 no 5 by Conservation Federation - Issuu

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

Sandhill Cranes making spring migration through the San Luis Valley; Festival this weekend — CPW – Coyote Gulch

Sandhill Crane  Missouri Department of Conservation

Return of the sandhill crane, Local News