Things you need to know about CORMORANTS!

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The common or great cormorant is a large, top heavy and mostly black bird. They have an upright posture, a wingspan of more than 5 foot and large webbed feet. At the base of their powerful hooked beaks they have a yellow patch of skin and bright bluey green eyes. Young birds have a more washed out appearance with brown wings and heads and creamy grey chests. Throughout the breeding season adult birds develop white patches on their thighs and sometimes around the back of their necks. Their wing feathers become more of an iridescent bronze colour and they grow a small crest of black feathers which can be held upright but also flat to their heads. Their feathers are not waterproof and as they spend a lot of their time in water they have to dry them out by standing upright with their wings splayed.
A lot of the time Cormorants can be seen standing along waterways, sometimes high on the branches of waterside trees or nearby buildings. Their webbed feet aren’t great for walking and they can only move slowly on land, but don’t let that lure you in. they are exceptional swimmers. For birds, cormorants have really dense bones meaning they float very low in the water and as their paddle shaped webbed feet are towards the back of their bodies they can swim really fast both above and below the surface. Their diet is made up almost exclusively of fish which they catch by chasing down then gripping with their hook shaped beaks before swallowing them whole. Although each bird only consumes around 500grams of fish per day, they are so good at catching them that they often grab hold of and eventually release fish that are too large for them to swallow. This can leave the larger fish scarred or sometimes fatally injured and has netted the cormorants a bad reputation with anglers.
Cormorants can breed at any time of the year if there is enough food available but this is usually confined to the warmer months between April and September. They nest communally, often in tall waterside trees but occasionally on cliff edges and both coastal and inland islands. Cormorants are for the main part monogamous but as pairs sometimes spend long lengths of time apart, upon returning to the nest they must perform a courtship display to solidify their relationship. If their mate takes the bait, egg laying can begin. Each female produces between 3 and 6 pale blue or green coloured eggs. These are incubated for 28 to 31 days and just like penguins, sometimes the parent birds will lift the eggs on top of their feet to keep them closer to the warmth of their bodies. When the chicks hatch out they are covered in a layer of dark brown down and look remarkably like their parents, albeit more gangly versions. They are fed on regurgitated fish for 50 days before they can fledge. After fledging the young birds stay with their parents for several more weeks as they learn how to catch fish for themselves. Some of this is through copying their parents but a lot is on the fly through trial and error.
Long term studies have shown that cormorant numbers have increased by around 40 percent since 1986. There are now around 9100 breeding pairs and 41,000 individual birds. No one is exactly sure why these birds seem to have begun casting out into inland areas rather than their traditional coastal breeding sites, perhaps this was caused by a lack of food in the oceans or maybe they have been drawn in by the ready supply of fish in fisheries and stocked ponds and lakes.
Cormorants can be really long lived birds with the oldest individual making it to a whopping 27years and 2 months. Their average lifespan is around 15 years but they do have a high mortality rate in their first year.

Some of the footage and images used in this video were obtained through creative commons. The originals can be found at:
"Smaller crowned cormorant eggs. Schaapen Island, Saldanha" by Mary Gillham Archive Project is licensed under CC BY 2.0 eggs
"man with cormorant" by suecan1 is licensed under CC BY 2.0
"Aalscholver - Great Cormorant" by Rob Zweers is licensed under CC BY 2.0
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I have a pet one, ended up on my dock on the sound in North Carolina. Its Wing is messed up but he can still swim and catch fish. I befriended him, I was clamming and I swam over with just my head above the water. I talked to him for a while and it relaxed. It's been here for a couple weeks and seems to enjoy my company now. Sleeps here at night and swims and catches fish in the daytime.

oldsouthbuckley
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Was photographing them today (Phoenix, AZ, local lake) and got curious about them. Thanks so much for the info.

Lizerator
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Ya know I am not a bird person, but when I watch this ... I actually liked the video! I found it very informative and well done! Thanks.

redcossack
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We have a big family of them that return to the Welland canal in Canada every year now. Been watching them for a few years and I'm so in love with them!

torihammond
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I love cormorants’ feathers; I’ve always thought their coats look kind of like suede, having that same sheen effect in the light, or rather, the direction from which the light is shining in relation to your eyes.

jamest
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I recently started seeing a flock of these at Canandaigua Lake in New York State. I've lived near there all my life, and have never seen these birds before, but these are definitely them. Naturally I became very curious about them, so thank you so much for sharing all this information! Just as you questioned in the video, I wonder why they are seeking more inland freshwater habitats, like Canandaigua Lake.

travismallaber
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6 fishy puns…. ! Very thorough video Liam with great information, nicely narrated. 👌🙏

Compo
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When flying my glider we we times encounter them in thermals as high as 1500m! So also exellent flyers!!

sirzacha
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Really appreciate the amount of effort put into these videos, thank you :)

heronfool
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Fellow bird brother...thanks for doing this video. Nobody does videos on Cormorants! We have several here in Arizona.

Technologysix
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Love your short videos. I hope you will do Great Crested Grebes soon. 🙂

Strange_Club
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Thank you for this excellent presentation! I honestly had no idea about these birds, I've learnt so much! Thank you!

blueberrymuffin
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Very interesting facts. I particularly enjoyed the fact that they work together. Just like humans and possibly even better than. Much appreciated, from Melbourne Australia.

ProfreshionalLifeBeyond
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Brilliant info on the cormorant. I managed to pick up 7 puns if I counted correctly! I wasn't really aware of them first time round so watched it all through again! Lol!! 😁

SkylarkFields
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Thanks for this run down on the Great cormorant. It is an impressive looking bird. Here in North America they are an uncommon visitor and only to the eastern coast. We have Double crested cormorant in the east primarily and Neotropic cormorant in the west. Both are much smaller then the Great cormorant.

michaeldeierhoi
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Found this this morning- very informative

patware
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Excellent, and what a genius way of ramping up the watch time by baiting us to watch it for a second time to land the pun count. Could have read the script in the description but reeling through all that text might have meant that I wouldn't quite net them all. I reckon you managed to cast out six in your narration. Well done. Your videos have got me hooked.
👍 😛 👍

NaturallyCuriousUK
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Birds of America by Mary Mccarthy brought me here, now I know why the writer was impressed by the bird.. good video

manhalhatem
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Excellent Liam as usual, I love this series ..

ramblingrob
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Brilliant video, thank you for putting your time and effort in too these videos. I will follow you

kevinbarry
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