Pelecanidae
Brown Pelican
11 June 2010 12:33

Photos copyright: RP/monacoeye • St Barths • 2008 • Do not copy without permission
Bird name: Brown Pelican
Latin: Pelecanus occidentalis
Other:
Family: Pelecanidae • Pelicans
Pictured above is the Caribbean Brown Pelican, Pelecanus occidentalis occidentalis, sent in by Robert Paylor in St Barths.
The Brown Pelican, the smallest of the pelicans, is found in North, Central and South America. In ”more photos”, a colony in Panama.More photos...
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Great White Pelican
03 March 2010 21:18


Photos copyright: monacoeye • Danube Delta, Romania • May 2009 • Do not copy without permission
Bird name: White Pelican
Latin: Pelecanus onocrotalus
Other: Great White Pelican • Eastern White Pelican
Family: Pelecanidae • Pelicans
Half of all White Pelicans breed in the Danube Delta, where they can be seen in great numbers, spiralling up on thermals, high in the sky, or swimming in the Black Sea and lakes in the Delta, often with cormorants.
The White Pelican has pink lores and dark irises, which distinguish it from the rarer Dalmatian Pelican. The White Pelican also has a thick black trailing stripe to on the wing. Pictured below in “more photos” is one unusual individual with both white and black feathers.

More photos...
Dalmatian Pelican
28 May 2009 16:24


Photos copyright: monacoeye • Danube Delta, Romania • May 2009 • Do not copy without permission
Bird name: Dalmatian Pelican
Latin: Pelecanus crispus
Other: Pélican frisé
Family: Pelecanidae • Pelicans
The Dalmatian Pelican, a key species for the Delta, is quite a rare bird, with IUCN conservation status classed as Vulnerable. There are reportedly about 1000 breeding pairs remaining, scattered across relatively few sites in south-eastern Europe.
Fortunately I saw about a dozen birds over three days in the Danube. Sometimes flying overhead, sometimes with White Pelicans standing on a spit, sometimes on lakes and waterways.
Whereas the White Pelican is seen in large flocks, the Dalmatian Pelican is usually seen in ones, twos and threes. It is distinguishable from the White Pelican by lack of pink colouring, especially lack of pink lores, grey, not dark, irises and lack of thick black wing stripe.
The birds I saw all had dirty white matted hair on the back of their necks - though one characteristic of the Dalmatian Pelican is much longer, curly, hair on the neck.
In the photo below, taken on the Black Sea, the first, second and fourth pelicans from the left are Dalmatian; the other two, with thinner pinkish necks, are White Pelicans.More photos...
Pelecanidae - Pelicans
25 August 2008 19:17
030 Pelecanidae - Pelicans - IOC 2.5 - 2010
Pelecanus onocrotalus - Great White Pelican - C, SW Eurasia - Africa, N India
Pelecanus rufescens - Pink-backed Pelican - Widespread Africa
Pelecanus philippensis - Spot-billed Pelican - SE India, Sri Lanka, Sumatra
Pelecanus crispus - Dalmatian Pelican - C, SW Eurasia - Greece to S China
Pelecanus conspicillatus - Australian Pelican - Widespread Australasia
Pelecanus erythrorhynchos - American White Pelican - C North America - S South America, Central America
Pelecanus occidentalis - Brown Pelican - coasts, Caribbean
Pelecanus thagus - Peruvian Pelican - coastal Peru & Chile
Pelecanus onocrotalus - Great White Pelican - C, SW Eurasia - Africa, N India
Pelecanus rufescens - Pink-backed Pelican - Widespread Africa
Pelecanus philippensis - Spot-billed Pelican - SE India, Sri Lanka, Sumatra
Pelecanus crispus - Dalmatian Pelican - C, SW Eurasia - Greece to S China
Pelecanus conspicillatus - Australian Pelican - Widespread Australasia
Pelecanus erythrorhynchos - American White Pelican - C North America - S South America, Central America
Pelecanus occidentalis - Brown Pelican - coasts, Caribbean
Pelecanus thagus - Peruvian Pelican - coastal Peru & Chile