By David D. Cooksy
[Editor’s note: This is the third of a four-part “how to” series. Look for “How to eat a crawdad” in a future issue.]
This series is a description of the hunting and consumption of prey by the big birds of Mission Trails Regional Park. In the first segment, I described how a great blue heron (ardea herodias) captured and consumed a bullfrog; in the second, how a great blue heron ate a catfish. In this segment, I describe how a snowy egret (egretta thula) catches and consumes a dragonfly.
If catching prey represents the most difficult step of a meal, the snowy egret displays masterful hunting skills when catching a dragonfly. In fact, for one I recently photographed, it was so easy, the meal was literally snatched out of the air as it flew past.
After properly prepared, prey is consumed head first. The snowy egret manipulates the dragonfly into position and, with some difficulty, swallows it down.
While photographing the sequences of bullfrog and catfish, it was difficult to determine whether the prey was still alive after the considerable preparation. However, I am quite certain the dragonfly was still alive as the wings were buzzing.
— David D. Cooksy is a trail guide at Mission Trails Regional Park.