Double-crested Cormorant - Phalacrocorax auritus
Identification Tips:
- Length: 27 inches Wingspan: 50 inches
- Sexes similar
- Large, dark waterbird with a long, hooked bill and long tail
- Long, thin neck
- Gular area squared off and orange, extending straight down across
throat
- Orange lores
- Often perches with wings spread to dry them
Adult:
- Entirely black plumage
- Small white plumes on head during breeding season
Immature:
- Pale throat and chest darkening below to dark belly; some
individuals are entirely pale underneath
- Brownish back and upperwings
Similar species:
Loons are similar on the water, but lack hooked bills.
Anhinga has a long, pointed bill and a much longer tail. All adult
cormorant species in the U.S. are separable by the shape and color
of the gular areas. No other species has orange lores and gular region
that does not form a point at the gape. Neotropical Cormorant can be
similar but is slimmer and longer-tailed, and has a differently shaped
gular area. Great Cormorant is also similar but has a yellowish,
pointed gular area surrounded with white as an adult. Immatures
are dark-chested and pale bellied, unlike Double-crested.