Brown Pelican Spotlight

Brown Pelican
Photo courtesy of Rochester Institute of Technology

Brown Pelican
Pelecanus occidentalis

Description: The Brown Pelican is dark and bulky with a wingspan of 6.5 feet. The throat pouch suspends from the lower half of the hooked bill and can hold 3 gallons of water and fish.

Life History: The Brown Pelican lives in flocks and flies in groups. Unlike most birds, which warm their eggs with the skin of their breasts, pelicans incubate their eggs with their feet, essentially standing on the eggs to warm them. This incubation method made them vulnerable to the effects of the pesticide DDT, because the DDT made the eggshells thin, and the incubating parents frequently cracked their eggs. Brown Pelicans dive from the air for fish. They also eat crustaceans.

Habitat: The Brown Pelican is found along ocean shores and bays. They are rarely seen inland

Distribution: The Brown Pelican is a permanent resident of the coastal marine environment from central North America southward to northern South America. It breeds in scattered locations along the Atlantic coast from Maryland southward around Florida, and westward to southern Texas and Mexico; and on the Pacific Coast from southern California down to South America. The largest U.S. colony is on California's West Anacapa Island.

Status: The Brown Pelican is listed as endangered, except on the Atlantic coast, Florida, and Alabama. Pesticide poisoning, especially by DDT, caused huge declines in Brown Pelican status. After the ban on DDT, the Brown Pelican population recovered. The total population in the United States now exceeds historical figures.

Resources:

Cornell University

National Audubon Society

Species Mashup
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Mid-Atlantic Species of Greatest Conservation Need [Configure]
This set of species have been identified in State Wildlife Action Plans as Species of Greatest Conservation Need (GCN) for the Mid-Atlantic region, which includes Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia, and the District of Columbia.

Instructions: Filter the Mid-Atlantic GCN species list below using the Taxa Groups and/or the States. Click on a species name to open more information about that species.

Option 1. Select one taxonomic group. This action will filter the list to display all species from the chosen taxonomic group and from any state in the region.

Option 2. Select one or more state(s). This action will filter the list to display a subset of species common to all chosen states.

Option 3. Select one taxonomic group and any number of states. This action will filter the list to display a subset of species from the chosen taxonomic group and that are common to all chosen states.
Filter Species List By Taxa Group
Click on any taxa group to view associated species list.
Vertebrates
Amphibians: 71 (3.65%)
Birds: 222 (11.43%)
Fish: 192 (9.88%)
Mammals: 63 (3.24%)
Reptiles: 73 (3.76%)
Invertebrates
Arachnids: 76 (3.91%)
Bivalves: 96 (4.94%)
Crustaceans: 128 (6.59%)
Gastropods: 155 (7.98%)
Insects: 731 (37.62%)
Myriapods: 82 (4.22%)
Other Invertebrates: 30 (1.54%)
Poriferans: 2 (0.10%)
Worms: 22 (1.13%)


Filter Species List By State
Click on any state to view associated species list.
US  map Pennsylvania Species of Greatest Conservation Need West Virginia Species of Greatest Conservation Need Virginia Species of Greatest Conservation Need District of Columbia Species of Greatest Conservation Need Maryland Species of Greatest Conservation Need Delaware Species of Greatest Conservation Need
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