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More information on the
Dry Tortugas N.P.
The sooty tern (Sterna fuscata) is a Florida bird that nests exclusively in the Dry Tortugas. About 80,000 adults breed each year on Bush Key. One egg per nest is laid in a shallow scrape on open sand or under scattered shrubs during late February or early March. After the breeding season, which ends in August, sooty terns leave the Tortugas and become strictly oceangoing birds.
Sooties do not dive for fish but surface feed, capturing minnows, flying fish, squid, and other top-dwelling species. This tern is all black above, except for white forehead, white below. Inmature birds have dark heads, white-flecked upperbacks, and shallowly forked tails.
Pelican can be seen as they rest in the South coaling dock ruins in Garden Key. The brown pelican was recenlty removed from the endangered species list.
The brown pelican (Pelecanus occidentalis) is probably Florida's most distinctive and widely recognized bird. This bird shows typically four different sets of plumages:
(Information obtained from Florida's Birds, by Herbert W. Kale, II, and David S. Maehr).
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