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Spotted a few herons this spring? There's a reason for that

If you've spotted a great blue heron chilling along the Rideau Canal over the past month or so, you're definitely not alone but it's not because there's more of them.

Lower-than-usual water levels make the majestic birds easier to spot

A heron stands in the Rideau Canal in April 2021, before the canal was filled for the summer. If you feel like you've seen more herons this year, you're right and it's due to lower-than-normal levels on the local waterways. (Ian Black/CBC)

If you've pointed or gawked ata great blue heron chilling along the Rideau Canal this spring, you're not alone.

There aren't necessarily more herons in the Ottawa area this year, but they've certainly been easierto spot, saidAlexanderStone, environmental program officer with the National Capital Commission.

The reason: lower-than-normallevels on the region's waterways.

When water levels are lower, Stone said, there's less distance between the surface and the small fish, amphibiansand other aquatic creatures great blue herons dine on.

That means the birdsdon't have to hug the shallow shorelines for a bite to eat, Stone said. Theycan fan out ontothe water itself making them easier to spot, especially with more folks usingthe canal and river pathways forexercise during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Ottawa residents are spotting more herons than usual this spring

3 years ago
Duration 0:51
Alexander Stone, environmental program officer with the National Capital Commission, says low water levels mean an easier meal for great blue herons, who are on the hunt for fish and amphibians living in shallow water.

"You generally see more of them out and about in those open habitats [when levels are low], versus if the water levels are quite high," Stone said. "Then they're less visible and they're hiding in other wetlands."

Conditions were ideal this year for low water levels, with the Ottawa River Regulation Planning Board noting both below-average snowfall along the river, and an early onset of balmy spring weather.

With Parks Canada recently allowing more water to flow into the Rideau Canal, the great blue herons there have mostly moved on to other spots, Stone said.

A heron stands in a shallow pond at Brown's Inlet in Ottawa's Glebe neighbourhood on May 6, 2021. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)

Enter the egret

While great blue heron populations have stayedrelatively stable,it's a different story for another unmissable bird.

Great egret populations have been on the rise every year since the first nest was spotted in the National Capital Region in 2005, Stone said.

The reason, however, remains a mystery.

"It could be related to a number of factorsincluding species distribution theymay be finding themselves able to expand. Or it could be related to climatic events," said Stone. "But we don't know what's driving the population increase."

A great egret is seen on Prince Edward Island in 2018. In the Ottawa area, populations of the metre-tall, bright white birds continue to rise year over year. (Dan McAskill)

It's also unclear what ecological impacts, if any, will come from rising egret populations, although Stone said egrets and great blue herons do compete for the same nesting sites.

Andrew Haydon Park and Shirley's Bay are two of the best places locally to spot great egrets, he added.

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