Great Blue Heron Field Guide — Florida's Tallest Wading Bird
Complete field guide to the Great Blue Heron in Florida — identification, feeding behavior, nesting colonies, and where to find North America's largest heron at its most accessible.
The Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias) is North America’s largest heron and one of the most reliably encountered large birds in Florida — present statewide and year-round, in every county, anywhere there is shallow water with fish. You identify it by its four-foot stature, blue-gray plumage, dagger-shaped yellow bill, and the bold black stripe over a yellow eye. The easiest places to watch one at close range are the boardwalk at Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach and the Anhinga Trail in Everglades National Park, both year-round. The rest of this guide covers identification, behavior, where to find the species, and how to plan a visit.
Stand on any Florida causeway at first light and you will find one. It stands knee-deep in tidal water, absolutely motionless, neck coiled like a compressed spring — a four-foot-tall bird that looks like it was carved from slate and gold. The Great Blue Heron (Ardea herodias) is North America’s largest heron, and Florida’s network of wetlands, estuaries, freshwater lakes, and coastal flats has made the state one of the species’ global strongholds. What surprises most people who finally stop to study one: this bird is not just large. It is ancient in posture, tactical in intelligence, and capable of killing a prey item larger than its own head.
ID at a Glance
Adults (breeding and non-breeding plumage):
- Size: 97–137 cm (38–54 in) tall. Wingspan 167–201 cm (66–79 in). Weight 2.1–3.6 kg (4.6–7.9 lb). The largest heron on the continent.
- Body color: Blue-gray overall, with a white face and a bold black stripe running from just above the eye to a long black crest plume trailing behind the head.
- Neck: White with black-and-chestnut streaking down the front; extremely long and S-curved in flight, retracted in a tight S when perching or standing.
- Bill: Long, dagger-shaped, yellow to yellow-orange. Pale at the base, darker at the tip.
- Legs: Dusky gray-green to dark gray. Long enough to wade in water up to 60 cm deep.
- Thighs: Rusty-chestnut patch visible at close range on adult birds — a reliable age marker.
- Breeding plumage: Long gray and white plume feathers (aigrettes) extending from chest and back. More intense bill color, briefly turquoise facial skin near eye.
Juveniles (first year):
- Darker overall; crown entirely black (no white), lacks long plumes. Bill paler. Rusty thigh patch absent or faint. Often confused with immature night-herons by beginners — the Great Blue’s much larger size separates them.
In flight:
- Neck retracted into tight S-curve (diagnostic — separates all herons from cranes and storks, which fly with neck extended).
- Broad, rounded wings with slow, deep wingbeats. Dark flight feathers contrast with gray wing coverts.
- Trails long gray legs behind. Appears prehistoric at distance.
The White Morph (“Great White Heron”):
- A distinct all-white color morph — not a separate species — occurring in South Florida, especially the Florida Keys and Florida Bay. Often considered taxonomically as Ardea herodias occidentalis. Distinguished from Great Egret by larger size, yellow (not black) legs, and heavier bill.
Taxonomy
Ardea herodias belongs to Family Ardeidae (herons, egrets, and bitterns), one of the most cosmopolitan waterbird families on Earth. The genus Ardea includes the world’s largest herons: the Goliath Heron (A. goliath) of Africa, the Grey Heron (A. cinerea) of Eurasia, and the Great Blue. Molecular studies place the Great Blue’s closest New World relative as the Cocoi Heron (A. cocoi) of South America, reflecting a relatively recent radiation across the Americas. Six subspecies are recognized across the species’ range; Florida hosts A. h. herodias (the nominate form) in most of the state and the larger, paler A. h. occidentalis in the extreme south.
The family Ardeidae has a fossil record extending to the Eocene, roughly 50 million years ago. The Great Blue’s current body plan — long neck for reach, dagger bill for strike, broad wings for sustained soaring — is an ancient design that has remained functionally unchanged across geological time.
Range and Habitat in Florida
Ardea herodias is found statewide and year-round in Florida, making it one of the most reliably encountered large birds in the state. No Florida county lacks Great Blue Herons.
Habitat: Highly adaptable. The species uses saltwater estuaries, mangrove shorelines, freshwater marshes, cypress swamps, river edges, drainage canals, lake margins, flooded agricultural fields, and even suburban retention ponds. The single requirement is shallow water with fish. Great Blues have been documented foraging in water as shallow as 3 cm and as deep as 60 cm.
Key concentrations:
- Everglades National Park — the freshwater and estuarine mosaic of the Everglades supports some of the largest Great Blue populations in the US. Anhinga Trail, Eco Pond at Flamingo, and the main park road marsh edges are reliable daily.
- Florida Keys and Florida Bay — the white morph (A. h. occidentalis) is most consistently found here, often on remote spoil islands and tidal flats around Islamorada and Key West National Wildlife Refuges.
- Merritt Island NWR / Canaveral — the impoundment system hosts hundreds of herons seasonally; Black Point Wildlife Drive is one of the most productive wading bird viewing routes in North America.
- Ding Darling NWR, Sanibel — year-round presence; herons visible from the Wildlife Drive at low tide working the impoundment shallows alongside roseate spoonbills and snowy egrets.
- Myakka River State Park — freshwater lake and marsh system with consistently viewable herons from the park road and boat tours.
- Wakodahatchee Wetlands, Delray Beach — constructed wetlands with nesting colonies and year-round foraging, walkable via an elevated boardwalk within arm’s length of foraging birds.
Seasonality: Present year-round, but breeding season (December–June) concentrates birds at traditional colony sites. Post-breeding dispersal in summer can bring birds to unusual locations including suburban retention ponds well inland.
Behavior and Ecology
Foraging: The Great Blue is primarily a stand-and-wait predator, using patient ambush over active pursuit. It adopts a rigid, low-crouched posture in shallow water, neck coiled, and strikes with a lightning-fast bill lunge when prey enters range. The strike speed has been measured at under 1/100th of a second — one of the fastest predatory strikes of any vertebrate.
Prey is swallowed whole, head-first. Large fish are manipulated by repeated bill tosses until oriented correctly. Adult herons have been documented killing and swallowing prey up to 30 cm long. Documented diet includes fish (dominant), frogs, salamanders, aquatic insects, crayfish, small turtles, snakes, small rodents, and occasionally small birds. The species is functionally an apex predator in freshwater shallow-water systems.
Breeding: Colonial nester, forming heronries (rookeries) of 5 to several hundred pairs, often in mixed colonies with other wading birds (egrets, night-herons, ibises, anhingas). Nest sites are typically in tall trees at or over water — cypress, mangrove, and dead snags are preferred. Nests are large stick platforms, reused across years and growing to 100+ cm in diameter with repeated additions.
Florida’s breeding season is extended, with courtship beginning as early as December in the south and egg-laying peaking January–April. Clutch size is 3–5 pale blue-green eggs. Both parents incubate for 27–28 days. Chicks are fed by regurgitation. Fledging occurs at approximately 60 days; young birds remain near the colony for several weeks before dispersing.
Adaptations: Ardea herodias possesses powder-down patches — specialized breast feathers that continuously disintegrate into a powder used to condition plumage and remove fish oils and slime after feeding. The middle toe has a comblike pectinate claw used specifically for preening these oils out of the feathers — a structural adaptation found across the heron family.
Conservation Status
IUCN Status: Least Concern (LC). Population estimated at 83,000–110,000 breeding pairs in North America; the global population is stable to slightly increasing.
US and Florida protections: Federally protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA). Legal to observe, photograph, and film; illegal to capture, harm, or possess (feathers, eggs, or live birds) without federal permits.
Historical note: Like all North American wading birds, Great Blue Herons were severely impacted by the plume-hunting trade of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Florida was the epicenter of this trade. Legal protection beginning with the Lacey Act (1900) and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (1918) reversed the decline across all large heron species.
Current threats:
- Wetland loss and degradation in freshwater breeding areas
- Disturbance of heronry sites during the sensitive nesting period (February–May)
- Fishing line entanglement — herons foraging near fishing piers commonly become entangled in monofilament
- Contaminants (mercury, PCBs) in fish-eating birds in industrially impacted waterways
Population trend: Stable and broadly increasing in Florida in line with Breeding Bird Survey data. Everglades water management decisions have measurable short-term effects on local wading bird productivity but have not reversed the overall positive trend.
Where to See It
- Wakodahatchee Wetlands, Delray Beach — boardwalk within meters of foraging and nesting birds; year-round, best at low tide morning hours.
- Anhinga Trail, Everglades NP — one of the most famous wildlife-viewing trails in North America; herons feed alongside anhingas and turtles in a concentrated freshwater slough. Year-round, dry season (November–April) peak.
- Black Point Wildlife Drive, Merritt Island NWR — 7-mile impoundment loop with exceptional wading bird density in winter.
- Ding Darling NWR, Sanibel — the 5-mile Wildlife Drive passes tidal impoundments active at every low tide.
- Fort De Soto County Park, Pinellas County — tidal flats and estuary edges; multiple herons visible from the main beach road and north beach area.
- Myakka River State Park, Sarasota — boat tours and the main park road lake margins offer consistently close views.
Best times: Early morning during falling tide for coastal and estuarine sites; any time of day at Wakodahatchee or Anhinga Trail. Breeding season (February–May) offers the spectacle of active colony display, nest-building, and chick-rearing.
Plan Your Visit
A quick capsule for getting eyes on a Great Blue Heron in Florida, drawn from the locations and seasonal notes above.
- Best season: Year-round, but the breeding window (December–June, peaking January–April) concentrates birds at colony sites and adds the spectacle of nest-building and chick-rearing. Winter (November–April dry season) is peak for the Everglades and impoundment drives.
- Best time of day: Early morning on a falling tide at coastal and estuarine sites. Wakodahatchee Wetlands and the Anhinga Trail produce sightings at any hour.
- Easiest access: Wakodahatchee Wetlands (elevated boardwalk, birds within arm’s length) and the Anhinga Trail (paved, level walkway) are the most beginner-friendly. The Black Point and Ding Darling wildlife drives are viewable from your vehicle.
- What to bring: Binoculars, a telephoto lens if photographing, sun protection, water, and insect repellent — Florida wetlands are mosquito-heavy outside the driest months.
- Etiquette and safety: Keep a respectful distance from nesting colonies during the sensitive February–May period; disturbance can cause adults to abandon nests. Never feed herons or fish near foraging birds, and pack out monofilament line — entanglement in discarded fishing line is a documented cause of heron injury.
- Fees: Several sites (Everglades National Park, Merritt Island and Ding Darling refuges, Florida state parks) charge entry or vehicle fees; Wakodahatchee Wetlands is free. Check the managing agency for current rates before you go.
Interesting Facts
- The white morph is not an albino. The all-white “Great White Heron” of the Florida Keys is a genetically distinct color morph of Ardea herodias, not a separate species and not an albino. It interbreeds freely with the blue-gray form where their ranges overlap in Florida Bay.
- Herons have excellent night vision. Ardea herodias forages actively at night, navigating by low-light vision. Their eyes have a high density of rod photoreceptors and a tapetum lucidum (reflective layer), adaptations for low-light hunting shared with many nocturnal predators.
- A heronry can be smelled before it’s seen. Large nesting colonies produce a distinctive ammonia-rich odor from accumulated guano and fish regurgitate below nests. Experienced birders use the smell to locate colonies in dense cypress swamps before spotting a single bird.
- They can be lethal to domestic cats and small dogs. Great Blue Herons are occasionally documented striking at small mammals near water. Their bill, driven by powerful neck musculature, can penetrate the skull of a small animal. This is not typical predation behavior but can occur when a bird feels cornered or when a small animal approaches too closely near a nest site.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where is the best place to see a Great Blue Heron in Florida?
The single most accessible spot is Wakodahatchee Wetlands in Delray Beach, where an elevated boardwalk puts you within arm’s length of foraging and nesting birds year-round. The Anhinga Trail in Everglades National Park is the next best — herons feed in a concentrated freshwater slough beside anhingas and turtles. Because the species is statewide and present in every Florida county, any shallow water with fish is a candidate; the listed wildlife drives at Merritt Island and Ding Darling are reliable in winter.
Why does the Great Blue Heron stand so still for so long?
Stillness is the hunting strategy. The species is an ambush predator: it locks into a low-crouched “alert” stance and waits for fish to move within range of its spear-like bill. The strike itself takes roughly 1/100th of a second — one of the fastest predatory movements measured in any vertebrate. Moving would scatter prey and waste energy, so a heron can hold a pose for 10–20 minutes before repositioning a single slow step.
What is the difference between a Great Blue Heron and a Great Egret?
The Great Blue Heron is the larger bird (up to 137 cm tall vs. about 104 cm for the Great Egret), with blue-gray plumage, a black stripe over the eye, a rusty-orange thigh patch in adults, and a dagger-yellow bill. The Great Egret (Ardea alba) is entirely white with a yellow bill and black legs. South Florida adds a wrinkle: an all-white color morph of the Great Blue (“Great White Heron”) occurs in the Keys and Florida Bay, separated from the Great Egret by its larger size and yellow legs. For other white waders you may see alongside it, compare the snowy egret.
Are Great Blue Herons dangerous to backyard koi ponds?
Yes. They are opportunistic and will systematically work a garden pond or aquaculture facility the same way they work a natural shoreline — a single bird can empty a small koi pond in a morning. Legal deterrents include netting, predator decoys (herons habituate to these quickly), and motion-activated sprinklers. The species is federally protected under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, so it is illegal to harm, capture, or kill one without a federal depredation permit.
Are Great Blue Herons endangered?
No. The IUCN lists the species as Least Concern, with an estimated 83,000–110,000 breeding pairs in North America and a stable to slightly increasing global population. Florida’s trend is stable and broadly increasing. The main local pressures are wetland loss, disturbance at nesting colonies during the February–May season, and entanglement in discarded fishing line.