“ONE OF A KIND”: LIMPKINS ON ABACO


Limpkin, Abaco (Tony Hepburn)

“ONE OF A KIND”: LIMPKINS ON ABACO

It’s 07.50 and we are trundling up the one-mile Delphi drive towards the highway in a truck towing the skiff for a day of fishing out on the Marls. We are ‘first boat out’, so the driveway has been peaceful for a while. Suddenly, some way ahead, a dark shape detaches itself from the margin of the coppice and steps into the roadway. Large. Dark brown. Kind of awkward looking. Long legs. Long decurved bill. And the bird I’ve been waiting to see for a long time. A limpkin.

My first sighting of one of the Delphi limpkinsLimpkin, Delphi, Abaco (RH) 1

Grabbing the small point ‘n’ shoot I take fishing (far cheaper to drown than an iPh@ne), I leaned out of the open window and fired off some optimistic shoots at the bird, on full (yet feeble) zoom. For what they are worth**, here are a few – and will you look at the toes on the creature!

Limpkin, Delphi, Abaco (RH) 2  Limpkin, Delphi, Abaco (RH) 3Limpkin, Delphi, Abaco (RH) 4  Limpkin, Delphi, Abaco (RH) 6

Limpkins (Aramus guarauna) have lived near the top end of the Delphi drive for several seasons, but they and I have never coincided. I haven’t even heard their weird screaming call. The guides sometimes see them when they first arrive each day, but limpkins are very shy, unsociable birds that keep themselves to themselves. Unless you see them cross a track, you might never notice them. To make matters more difficult, they are mainly “nocturnally and crepuscular”, so they are not generally active during the day.

Limpkin at Gilpin PointLimpkin Gilpin Point, Abaco (Troy Mailis)

ONE OF A KIND

The limpkin is a species of long-billed, long-legged wading bird, and is unrelated to herons, cranes and rails despite appearances. In fact, it has the honour to be the sole member of its taxonomic family. They may be found near ponds, in mangroves, in dense coppice or on the edge of pinewoods. They move jerkily, with a flickering tail and, as with any ID-cooperative bird, to see one is to know one.

Juvenile limpkin220px-Limpkin_Juvenile

TEN LIMPID LIMPKIN FACTS TO ENTHRAL PUNTERS AT PETE’S PUB

  • The Limpkin has its own ‘monotypic’ family – a one-off species of bird
  • They eat snails and molluscs (also insects, worms & frogs), using their beaks to snatch them
  • They may leave piles of discarded shells in their favourite feeding sites
  • The birds are ungainly and awkward: “limpkin” probably derives from their limping gait
  • Males and females have the same plumage (males being slightly larger)
  • The beak acts like tweezers – slightly open and closing at the tip – for tweaking snails etc
  • Territory is defended aggressively, with ‘ritualized charging and wing-flapping’ at intruders
  • Sex lives: they are monogamous; or polyandrous (a male and more than one female. Tsk.)
  • They use ‘courtship feeding’ – males will catch and shell a snail and then feed it to a female
  • They are also known as the ‘Crying Bird’ for their bizarre shrieking call, as used in films (below)

Range maparam_guar_AllAm_map

Olivia Patterson of Friends of the Environment kindly sent me this video that she posted on their FB page a while back with the comment: “Do you know what a limpkin sounds like? There are a pair of them which live around the FRIENDS office. Check out this video to hear them calling out for each other. See if you can spot the limpkin! (hint… look at the pine tree on the left). Limpkins typically live near wetlands and eat snails”.

Limpkins call mainly at dusk in the night, or at dawn. The frankly somewhat tedious and repetitive cry has been phonetically rendered as “kwEEEeeer orklAAAar“, if that helps you to remember it! The racket has even achieved fame in films: it has been used for jungle sound effects in Tarzan films; and more recently for the HIPPOGRIFF in the film Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban.

Favourite food – the apple snail220px-Limpkin-snail2

** I’m not ashamed to use my more pathetic photos when context permits…

Credits: Header, Tony Hepburn; 5 rubbish photos from a moving truck, RH; Gilpin Point, Troy Maillis; 3 other images wiki (uncredited); range map, Cornell; video, Olivia Patterson / FOTE; general long-billed rootling around for info, with a nod to wiki.

A good wing-shake

9 thoughts on ““ONE OF A KIND”: LIMPKINS ON ABACO

  1. Pingback: Limpkins in Florida, USA | Dear Kitty. Some blog

  2. Hi Keith,

    Do you know what this bird is? I’d never seen one on Abaco until this past year in November when I saw this bird at Cherokee Sound.

    Hope all’s well with you. I enjoy reading your posts. I drove out to Delphi and was told it’s changed owners? I was hoping to see Peter and find a guide who could take me to Gilpin Pond, but there was no one around except the groundskeepers.

    What’s this bird???????

    Nina Henry henrynl@shaw.ca (306) 934-8809 http://www.ninahenry.com

    >

    Like

    • Hi Nina, good to hear from you. What bird? No link given! Can you email me a pic and I will (try to) ID it for you!
      No change of ownership, but just of the manager. Manager Sandy married Caroline (the ‘parrot lady’), and they live in Panama City now. Max took over from him a couple of years ago. No other changes – unless something has happened since we were there last month… but I think I would have heard about that!
      Often during the day, if everyone is out fishing etc, there will only be staff around with maybe some guests round the pool / on the beach. I’d love to have taken you to Gilpin Pond! Last month it was very disappointing there. Very low water, and that strange red algal bloom it gets when there’s not been enough rain. Makes photos look horrible. Unusable in fact. Bahama pintails as usual, a few yellowlegs, a passing heron. Thin pickings!

      Hope we can meet another year. Meanwhile, send me the bird!

      Like

  3. Oh how I love the limpkin moments. I’ve seen two–my first was far away (in Mexico), the second sighting was in Belize and much closer. Such a quirky bird! Enjoyed hearing it too, for this was new to me. Congratulations on seeing your first Abaco limpkin, RH.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. There is a special kind of birding magic in a species that is always there but hides away until you think its a figment of others imagination, then it pops out and lets you into its secret world. Mine is the Wryneck thanks for sharing yours and the photos.

    Like

COMMENTS ARE WELCOME!