Dalmatian pelican

The Dalmatian pelican (Pelecanus crispus) is the most massive member of the pelican family, and perhaps the world's largest freshwater bird, although rivaled in weight and length by the largest swans. They are elegant soaring birds, with wingspans that rival that of the great albatrosses, and their flocks fly in graceful synchrony. With a range spanning across much of Central Eurasia, from the Mediterranean in the West to the Taiwan Strait in the East, and from the Persian Gulf in the South to Siberia in the North, it is a short-to-medium-distance migrant between breeding and overwintering areas. No subspecies are known to exist over its wide range, but based on size differences, a Pleistocene paleosubspecies, P. c. palaeocrispus, has been described from fossils recovered at Binagady, Azerbaijan

Scientific Name : Pelecanus crispus

Family : Pelecanidae

Order : Pelecaniformes

Class : Aves

Type : Pelicans

Conservation Status : Near threatened (NT)

Size : 160 - 183

Compare Size : Kite +++

Weight : 7250 – 15000

Migratory : Migrant

Sex Alike : Yes

Nesting Season : 1 - 6 eggs

Habitat:
fresh-water lakes, rivers, deltas and estuaries.

Breeding:
March or April

Feeding:
fish


Identification Features

Male & Female
Nape curly nape feathers
Legs grey
Gular skin In Breeding plumage orange-red
Eyes bare skin around the eye vary from yellow to purplish in colour
Bill has yellow tip
Wing In flight grayish-white with black tips
Note :
males are larger than the females; silvery-white overall plumamge, In winter, adult Dalmatian pelicans go from silvery-white to a dingier brownish-grey cream colour

Similar Birds

(Pelicans)