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Birds in Nature - images of wild birds by Richard Ditch |

Subject:Neotropic Cormorant (Phalacrocorax
brasilianus)
Place: Scottsdale, AZ, USA
Date: June 5, 2002
Equipment: Nikon N90S, Nikkor AF-S 300/2.8 & TC20E (= 600/5.6),
tripod
Film: Fujichrome Sensia 100
Exposure: Aperture priority matrix metered, natural light, no fill
flash
Scan: Minolta Dimage, 90% of frame
Commentary: Neotropic Cormorants are birds of central America
that reach their northern limit in southern Texas and Arizona. They
have increased in number and pushed further north in AZ in the eight
years I've lived here, and now can be found around Phoenix. They look
a lot like the more numerous Double-crested Cormorant, differing is
size, length of tail, and coloring around the face and throat.
This bird was photographed where an unlikely Brandt's Cormorant had
been reported the previous day - a bird never seen before in AZ, and
rarely away from the immediate Pacific coast. The report caused quite
a stir, and birders looking for it a few hours later reported a
Double-crested Cormorant in the same spot. When I visited the spot
the following afternoon with the person who reported the Brandt's,
this is the only cormorant we found.
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