American Bittern Botaurus lentiginosus Scientific name definitions
- LC Least Concern
- Names (46)
- Monotypic
Text last updated April 1, 2009
Sign in to see your badges
Species names in all available languages
| Language | Common name |
|---|---|
| Afrikaans | Noord-Amerikaanse Grootrietreier |
| Basque | Txori zezen amerikarra |
| Bulgarian | Американски воден бик |
| Catalan | bitó nord-americà |
| Croatian | američki bukavac |
| Czech | bukač severoamerický |
| Danish | Amerikansk Rørdrum |
| Dutch | Noord-Amerikaanse roerdomp |
| English | American Bittern |
| English (AVI) | American Bittern |
| English (United States) | American Bittern |
| Estonian | habehüüp |
| Faroese | Sevglámur |
| Finnish | amerikankaulushaikara |
| French | Butor d'Amérique |
| French (Canada) | Butor d'Amérique |
| Galician | Abetouro norteamericano |
| German | Schwarzbart-Rohrdommel |
| Greek | Αμερικανικός Ήταυρος |
| Haitian Creole (Haiti) | Makwali ameriken |
| Hebrew | אנפה משורטטת אמריקנית |
| Hungarian | Amerikai bölömbika |
| Icelandic | Reyrþvari |
| Japanese | アメリカサンカノゴイ |
| Latvian | Amerikas dumpis |
| Lithuanian | Šiaurės Amerikos baublys |
| Norwegian | amerikarørdrum |
| Polish | bąk amerykański |
| Portuguese (Portugal) | Abetouro-americano |
| Romanian | Buhai de baltă american |
| Russian | Американская выпь |
| Serbian | Američki vodeni bik |
| Slovak | bučiak hnedokrký |
| Slovenian | Severnoameriška bobnarica |
| Spanish | Avetoro Lentiginoso |
| Spanish (Costa Rica) | Avetoro Norteño |
| Spanish (Cuba) | Guanabá rojo |
| Spanish (Dominican Republic) | Martinete |
| Spanish (Honduras) | Avetoro Norteño |
| Spanish (Mexico) | Avetoro Norteño |
| Spanish (Panama) | Mirasol Norteño |
| Spanish (Puerto Rico) | Yaboa Americana |
| Spanish (Spain) | Avetoro lentiginoso |
| Swedish | amerikansk rördrom |
| Turkish | Amerika Balabanı |
| Ukrainian | Бугай американський |
Botaurus lentiginosus (Rackett, 1813)
Definitions
- BOTAURUS
- botaurus
- lentiginosa / lentiginosus
The Key to Scientific Names
Legend Overview
Full content is available exclusively to Birds of the World subscribers. Sign in Learn more
Introduction
The American Bittern is a solitary, cryptically colored heron that breeds in freshwater wetlands from the mid-United States to northern Canada. It prefers wetlands dominated by tall, emergent vegetation, and within these habitats frequents vegetation fringes and shorelines. It relies on stealth more than pursuit to forage, waiting motionless for long periods to capture passing prey—mainly insects, amphibians, crayfish, and small fish and mammals. It is most active during crepuscular hours.
This bittern uses resounding calls to communicate within the thick vegetation that dominates its nesting habitats. These calls have an eerie, ventriloquistic quality, and many vernacular names for this species, including “stake-driver,” “thunder-pumper,” and “mire-drum,” alludes to these calls. Males use elaborate displays to court females but participate little in rearing the young. Females build nests; incubate eggs, and feed and brood chicks.
Because of this species' secretive nature and inaccessible habitats, remarkably little is known about basic aspects of its biology, including sources of mortality, habitat use, mating systems, and population structure. Basic research on its natural history would help to conserve the species, which is undergoing substantial declines over much of the U.S. owing largely to loss and degradation of wetland habitats.
- Year-round
- Migration
- Breeding
- Non-Breeding