Description
Those long, wispy feathers forming a "beard" on the neck/breast of a Great Blue Heron are called pectoral plumes. They are ornamental feathers that grow during breeding season, along with two other types of plumes 7:
• Occipital plumes — the black pin plumes projecting from the back of the head
• Scapular plumes — soft plumes on the wings
• Pectoral plumes — the elegant, wispy feathers forming the beard-like appearance on the breast
These plumes are most spectacular in spring during breeding season 7. Interestingly, herons also have special feathers called powder down — these never moult, instead fraying continuously from the end while growing from the base, producing a fine powder the heron uses to absorb and remove slime and oil from its feathers. -- Brave Browser research
Taken By
Dennis Smith
Taken On
February 22, 2026
Tagged
animal
bird
waterfowl
stork
beak
crane_bird
vertebrate
wildlife
ciconiiformes
great_herons
feather
pelecaniformes
heron
seabird
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Focal:
300
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Lens Model:
RF75-300mm F4-5.6
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Shutter speed:
0.0003125
sec
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Aperture: f/
8