Dictionary Definition
Heron
Noun
1 Greek mathematician and inventor who devised a
way to determine the area of a triangle and who described various
mechanical devices (first century) [syn: Hero, Hero of
Alexandria]
2 gray or white wading bird with long neck and
long legs and (usually) long bill
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈhɛrən/
- /"hEr@n/
- Rhymes with: -ɛrən
Noun
- A long-legged, long-necked wading bird of the family Ardeidae.
Translations
bird
- Albanian: çapka
- Basque: koartza
- Belarusian: чапля
- Bosnian: čaplja
- Breton: kerc’heiz
- Bulgarian: чапла
- Catalan: agró
- Croatian: čaplja
- Czech: volavka
- Danish: hejre
- Dutch: reiger
- Esperanto: ardeo
- Estonian: haigur
- Faroese: hegri
- Finnish: haikara
- Frankish: haigru
- French: héron
- Friulian: airon
- Galician: garza
- German: Reiher
- Greek: ερωδιός (erodios) , αρδέα (ardea) , τσικνιάς (tsiknias)
- Hungarian: gém, kócsag
- Icelandic: hegri
- Indonesian: bangau (?)
- Irish: corr
- Italian: airone
- Japanese: 鷺 サギ (sagi), 白鷺 シラサギ (shirasagi)
- Korean: 해오라기 (haeOragi), 왜가리 (waegari), 백로 (白鷺, baegro, baekro)
- Ladin: airon
- Latin: ardea , ardeola
- Latvian: gārnis
- Lithuanian: garnys
- Low Saxon: Reier, Reiger
- Macedonian: сива чапjа (siva čapja)
- Maltese: russett
- Norwegian: hegre
- Occitan: bernat
- Old English: hragra
- Old French: hairon (Frankish: haigru)
- Old High German: heigaro , reigaro
- Old Occitan: * aigreta
- Polish: czapla
- Romansh: irun
- Romany: kokosturko , kokosturka
- Russian: цапля (caplja)
- Sami: ránesháigir
- Sardinian: perdigiorronadas, mengoni, menga, garza
- Scottish: corra-ghritheach
- Serbian: сива чапља
- Slovak: volavka
- Slovenian: čaplja
- Spanish: garza
- Swedish: häger
- Turkish: balıkçıl
- Ukrainian: чапля
- Upper Sorbian: čapla
- Welsh: crëyr
- West Frisian: reager
Extensive Definition
The herons are wading birds in the Ardeidae family. Some
are called egrets or
bitterns instead of
herons. Within the family, all members of the genera Botaurus and
Ixobrychus are referred to as bitterns, and - including the
Zigzag
Heron or Zigzag Bittern - are a monophyletic group within
the Ardeidae. However, egrets are not a biologically distinct group
from the herons, and tend to be named differently because they are
mainly white and/or have decorative plumes, and while having the
same build as the larger herons tend to be smaller.
The classification of the individual heron/egret
species is fraught with difficulty, and there is still no clear
consensus about the correct placement of many species into either
of the two major genera, Ardea and
Egretta.
Similarly, the relationship of the genera in the family is not
completely resolved. However, one species formerly considered to
constitute a separate monotypic family Cochlearidae,
the Boat-billed
Heron, is now regarded as a member of the Ardeidae.
Although herons resemble birds in some other
families, such as the storks, ibises and spoonbills, they differ from
these in flying with their necks retracted, not outstretched. They
are also one of the bird groups that have powder
down.
The members of this family are mostly associated
with wetlands, and prey
on fish, frogs and other aquatic species. Some, like the Cattle Egret
and Black-headed
Heron, also take large insects, and are less tied to watery
environments. Some members of this group nest colonially in trees,
others, notably the bitterns, use reedbeds.
In February 2005, the Canadian scientist
Dr. Louis
Lefebvre announced a method of measuring avian IQ in terms of their
innovation in feeding habits. Herons were named among the most
intelligent birds based on this scale, reflecting a wide variety,
flexibility and adaptiveness to acquire food.
Taxonomy and systematics
Analyses of the skeleton, mainly the skull, suggested that the Ardeidae
could be split into a diurnal
and a crepuscular/nocturnal group which included
the bitterns. From DNA studies and
skeletal analyses focusing more on bones of body and limbs, this
grouping has been revealed as incorrect. Rather, the similarities
in skull morphology
reflect convergent
evolution to cope with the different challenges of daytime and
nighttime feeding. Today, it is believed that three major groups
can be distinguished, which are (from the most primitive to the
most advanced):
- tiger herons and the boatbill
- bitterns
- day-herons and egrets, and night-herons
The night herons could warrant separation as
subfamily Nycticoracinae, as it was traditionally done. However,
the position of some genera (e.g. Butorides or Syrigma) is unclear
at the moment, and molecular studies have until now suffered from a
small number of studied taxa. Especially the relationship among the
ardeine subfamily is very badly resolved. The arrangement presented
here should be considered provisional.
Subfamily Tigrisomatinae
- Genus Cochlearius - Boat-billed Heron
- Genus Tigrisoma - typical tiger-herons (3 species)
- Genus Tigriornis - White-crested Tiger-heron
- Genus Zonerodius - New Guinea Tiger-heron
Subfamily Botaurinae
- Genus Zebrilus - Zigzag Heron
- Genus Ixobrychus - small bitterns (8 living species, 1 recently extinct)
- Genus Botaurus - large bitterns (4 species)
Subfamily Ardeinae
- Genus Zeltornis (fossil)
- Genus Nycticorax typical night-herons (2-4 living species, 5 recently extinct; includes Nyctanassa)
- Genus Gorsachius - Asian night-herons (3-5 species)
- Genus Butorides - green-backed herons (3 species; sometimes included in Ardea)
- Genus Agamia - Agami Heron
- Genus Pilherodius - Capped Heron
- Genus Ardeola pond-herons (6 species)
- Genus Bubulcus - cattle-egrets (1-2 species, sometimes included in Ardea)
- Genus Proardea (fossil)
- Genus Ardea - typical herons (11-17 species)
- Genus Syrigma - Whistling Heron
- Genus Egretta - typical egrets (7-13 species)
- Genus undetermined
- Easter Island Heron, Ardeidae gen. et sp. indet. (prehistoric)
Fossil herons of unresolved affiliations:
- Xenerodiops (Early Oligocene of Fayyum, Egypt)
- "Anas" basaltica (Late Oligocene of "Warnsdorf", Czechia)
- Ardeagradis
- Calcardea
- Proardeola - possibly same as Proardea
Other prehistoric and fossil species are included
in the respective genus accounts.
References
- (1998): Molecular and osteological heron phylogenies: sources of incongruence. Auk 115: 127–141. DjVu fulltext PDF fulltext
- (1995): Phylogenetic relationships of the zigzag heron (Zebrilus undulatus) and white-crested bittern (Tigriornis leucolophus) estimated by DNA-DNA hybridization. Auk 112(3): 672-679. DjVu fulltext PDF fulltext
- (2000): Relative Patterns and Rates of Evolution in Heron Nuclear and Mitochondrial DNA. Mol. Biol. Evol. 17(3): 437–450. PDF fulltext
External links
- Heron videos on the Internet Bird Collection
heron in Arabic: بلشونيات
heron in Aragonese: Ardeidae
heron in Franco-Provençal: Hègron
heron in Guarani: Guyratĩ
heron in Bulgarian: Чаплови
heron in Catalan: Ardeid
heron in Danish: Hejrer
heron in German: Reiher
heron in Spanish: Ardeidae
heron in Esperanto: Ardeedoj
heron in Persian: حواصیل
heron in French: Ardeidae
heron in Korean: 왜가리과
heron in Ido: Herono
heron in Indonesian: Kuntul
heron in Ossetian: Кæсаглас
heron in Italian: Ardeidae
heron in Hebrew: אנפתיים
heron in Swahili (macrolanguage): Kingoyo
heron in Latin: Ardea (avis)
heron in Lithuanian: Garniniai
heron in Hungarian: Gémfélék
heron in Dutch: Reigers en roerdompen
heron in Japanese: サギ科
heron in Norwegian: Hegrefamilien
heron in Norwegian Nynorsk: Hegrefamilien
heron in Polish: Czaplowate
heron in Portuguese: Ardeidae
heron in Russian: Цаплевые
heron in Slovak: Volavkovité
heron in Swedish: Hägrar
heron in Tagalog: Bakaw (ibon)
heron in Thai: นกกระสา
heron in Turkish: Balıkçılgiller
heron in Ukrainian: Чапля
heron in Contenese: 鷺
heron in Chinese: 鹭科