Mystery Bird: American Coot, Fulica americana

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[Mystery bird] American Coot, Fulica americana, photographed in [I will identify this bird for you tomorrow]

Image: Joseph Kennedy, 2 April 2008 [larger view].

Nikon D200, Kowa 883 telescope TSN-PZ camera eyepiece 1/800s f/8.0 at 1000.0mm iso400.

Please name at least one field mark that supports your identification.

Rick Wright, author of Aimophila Adventures and Managing Director of WINGS Birding Tours Worldwide, writes:

Lobed feet are rare in birds. The foot in question is too long, too green, and too strong for any grebe, and too stout for a phalarope. The green color, with just a hint of red above the "ankle," points towards the coots, a possibility nicely confirmed by the slaty body plumage barely visible at the top of the tibia.

But which coot? I think the green of the tarsus may be too bright for Eurasian Coot, but don't know whether American Coot is alone in having such colorful gams.

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Classic Coot feet.

I thought coot straight away too - "incompletely apoptosed interdigital webbing" wasn't quite the way I would put it. Plus the body is black.

I have no idea if it occurs in the US, but then I don't know if the photo was taken over there. It's not the UK, though. Too sunny.

Definitely a coot.

No way. Too much color for a coot. It's a common moorhen. They also have black on their bodies, but the small patch of pink above the ankle is a give away. Also, coots can have greenish legs, but to my knowledge, they are uniformly colored. This leg blends from green to yellow to pink.

By Red Dragon (not verified) on 16 Apr 2009 #permalink

It's a coot, as gallinules/moorhens don't have lobed toes.

Out on land those toes look rather reptilian, don't they?

Lobed toes mean either a grebe or a coot. Based on the yellow leg color and the bit of black plumage, I'd say American Coot.