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Greater White-fronted Goose
Anser albifrons
Species
description provided by eNature
Description
27-30" (69-76 cm). A dusky-brown goose with conspicuous white
belly and undertail coverts; white patch on front of face; underparts
barred and flecked with black. Bill usually pink; legs orange. Birds
from Greenland have orange bills. Young birds lack white face and
black bars on underparts.
Voice
A distinctive bark: kla-ha! or kla-hah-luk!
Habitat
Breeds on marshy tundra; winters on marshes and bays.
Nesting
5 or 6 cream-colored eggs in a down-lined grassy depression on the
tundra.
Range
Breeds in Alaska, far-northern Canada, and Greenland. Winters from
coastal British Columbia to California, in New Mexico, and along
Gulf Coast in Texas and Louisiana; more rarely on East Coast and
in interior. Also breeds in northern Eurasia.
Discussion
This is the least common goose in the East, occurring in numbers
only along the Gulf Coast in Louisiana and Texas. Its winter headquarters
is California's Sacramento Valley. These geese often migrate in
large flocks at night, when they can be identified by their distinctive
call. Like other geese they often leave the marshes to feed in nearby
stubble fields, where they are frequently concealed from view until
the observer is very close, when they explode noisily into the air.
The "Tule Goose" of the West Coast is considered a large
race of this goose; its breeding grounds were unknown until 1979,
when birds were found nesting near Anchorage, Alaska.
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