20 White Birds In Florida (ID, Photo, Call Guide)

Swallow-tailed Kite

From egrets to Snowy Owls there is something mesmerizing about white birds that means you can’t quite take your eyes off of them and want to know more.

But there are so many similar-looking white birds, especially egrets, herons, and ibis. So how do you know which is which?

Well, you have come to the right place as this guide will help you identify white birds by sight and sound and know which times of the year they are in Florida to help you narrow down the options and find out more about birds near you.

White Birds In Florida By Season

White Birds in Florida all year: Great Egret, White Ibis, Great Blue Heron, Little Blue Heron, Snowy Egret, Cattle Egret, Wood Stork, Rock Pigeon, Snowy Plover, White-tailed Kite

White Birds in Florida in summer: Swallow-tailed Kite, Common Tern, White-tailed Tropicbird

White Birds in Florida in winter: Ring-billed Gull, American White Pelican, Northern Gannet, Mute Swan, Whooping Crane, Snow Goose, Ross’s Goose

This guide will help you identify those white birds out on the water or in the woods or fields and are listed from most to least common according to checklists submitted by bird watchers on ebird for Florida.

20 White Birds In Florida

1. Great Egret

Great Egret (Ardea alba)

Great Egrets are very common in Florida and are spotted in the state all year. They are recorded in 31% of summer checklists and 38% of winter checklists submitted by bird watchers for the state.

Great Egrets are at their best during the breeding season when males have neon green facial skin and long, wispy feathers (aigrettes) extending from their backs to their tails, which they show off during courtship, like how a peacock flares out its tail.  

They are large, all-white herons, which is why they’re often called Great White Herons. They are also called common egrets. These large birds are white, with dagger-like, long, bright yellow bills and long, black legs and feet.

Non-breeding males, females, and juveniles look alike. 

  • Ardea alba
  • Length: 37 – 41 in (94 – 104cm)
  • Weight: 59.96 oz (1699 g)
  • Wingspan: 54 – 55 in (137 – 140 cm)

Great Egrets have a vast range around the world. Those in the southern and coastal US states remain all year, but those more inland and in Canada migrate south.

You can find Great Egrets in freshwater and saltwater marshes and tidal flats, but also fish ponds.

Great Egret Calls:

Fun Fact: The Great Egret was almost hunted to extinction because of their long white feathers (aigrettes) that were mainly used to decorate ladies’ hats. 

2. White Ibis

White Ibis Eudocimus albus
Adult White Ibis
Juvenile white ibis
Juvenile White Ibis

White Ibises are spotted all year in Florida. They appear in 32% of summer checklists and 36% of winter checklists.

American White Ibises are medium to large-sized birds that have all-white bodies. Their distinct, bright pink facial skin, large downward-curved bill, and long legs easily identify them.

These same physical characteristics turn scarlet red during the breeding season. Their eyes are blue. They also have black tips on their wings but these can only be seen in flight. 

Male and female American White Ibises look similar but juveniles are brown on their heads, wings, and back, have a pale brown streak on their necks, and they are white underneath.

  • Eudocimus albus
  • Length: 21 – 27 in (53 – 69 cm)
  • Weight: 36.8 oz (1043 g)
  • Wingspan: 21 – 27 in (53 – 69 cm)

American White Ibis are resident all year around the Gulf Coast and southern Atlantic coast but may move inland slightly during the breeding season.

You can find American White Ibises in wetland environments. They prefer freshwater marshes, coastal estuaries, mangroves, flooded pastures, mudflats, and swamps. While they wade in shallow water, they are often seen on lawns and parks.

American White Ibis Call:

Fun Fact: When American White Ibis’s prey is muddy, they will wash the mud off first before eating it.

3. Great Blue Heron

great blue heron flying

Great Blue Herons are very common in Florida and occur in 24% of summer checklists and 33% of winter checklists.

Great Blue Herons are very large, majestic birds that are the largest heron native to North America. Their pale gray bodies can look white in flight.

They have a white face with a black crest or plume that extends from the front of their eyes to the back of their heads. Their bills are yellow-orangish.

They have long gray necks with black and white streaking in the front, pale grayish-blue bodies with dark wingtips, and long gray legs. 

The Great Blue Heron has a white morph subspecies called the Great White Heron in Florida.

  • Ardea herodias
  • Length: 46 – 52 in (117 – 132 cm)
  • Weight: 128 oz (3628 g)
  • Wingspan: 77 – 82 in (196 – 208 cm)

Great Blue Herons remain in most US states all year, but those that breed in the Mid-West and Canada migrate south.

You can find Great Blue Herons in many wetland environments. They can be present in fresh and saltwater marshes, mangrove swamps, flooded marshes, lake edges, or shorelines.

Great Blue Heron Call:

Fun Fact: Great Blue Herons defend their feeding territory with dramatic wing outstretched displays, with their heads thrown back.

4. Little Blue Heron – Juvenile

Little Blue Heron
Adult Little Blue Heron
Juvenile Little Blue Heron
Juvenile Little Blue Heron

Little Blue Herons are very common in Florida and are spotted in the state all year. They are recorded in 21% of summer checklists and 29% of winter checklists.

Adult Little Blue Herons are actually not so little. They’re medium to large-sized with long, elongated bodies. Their heads and necks have a purplish hue with dangling feathers across the nape. 

Their eyes are pale yellow and may turn gray-green during the breeding season. Their long, dagger-like bills are two-toned – pale blue or grayish with black tips. Their bodies are slate-blue. Their legs are long and black to gray-green. 

Juvenile Little Blue Herons are totally white during their first year of life before becoming a mix of dark gray, blue, and white.

  • Egretta caerulea
  • Length: 24 – 29 in (61 – 74 cm)
  • Weight: 16.22 oz (460 g)
  • Wingspan: 40 – 41 in (102 – 104 cm)

Little Blue Herons breed in eastern US States before migrating south, but those along the Gulf Coast and Mexico into south America remain all year.

You can find Little Blue Herons around water, whether in swamps, marshes, ponds, streams, lagoons, tidal flats, canals, ditches, fish hatcheries, or flooded fields.

Little Blue Heron Calls:

Fun Fact: Because of the white coloring of Juvenile Little Blue Herons, their presence among Snowy Egrets so they can catch more fish and have extra protection against predators.

5. Snowy Egret

Snowy Egret

Snowy Egrets are spotted all year in Florida. They appear in 20% of summer checklists and 24% of winter checklists.

Snowy Egrets, as their name suggests, are small, all-white herons. They have yellow irises and skin around their eye, long, black bills, long, black legs, and bright yellow feet. 

During the breeding season, long, lacy feathers appear on their heads, necks, and backs. Their lores or facial skin turn reddish-pink, and their toes turn orange-red during courtship.

Interestingly, these areas of their bodies also become bright red during aggressive encounters. 

Juveniles are similar to adults but without head plumes. The colors on their bills and legs are also lighter, with lores and legs more greenish-yellow. 

  • Egretta thula
  • Length: 22 – 27 in (56 -69 cm)
  • Weight: 16.75 oz (475 g)
  • Wingspan: 39.4 in (100 cm)

Snowy Egrets migrate from most US states, except along the Gulf Coast and southwest coast. They remain all year in Mexico, Central, and South America.

You can find Snowy Egrets in shallow, wetland habitats such as marshes, riverbanks, lakesides, pools, salt marshes, and estuaries. For nesting, they prefer swamp forests with protective trees and bushes.

Snowy Egret Call:

Fun Fact: Snowy Egrets were almost hunted down to extinction because of their beautiful white head feathers that were the perfect decoration or accessory to women’s hats.

6. Cattle Egret

Cattle Egret

Cattle Egrets are spotted all year in Florida. They are common here and occur in 15% of summer checklists and 13% of winter checklists.

Cattle Egrets have a smart way of catching their food…they stand on the backs of cattle, so when the cattle move and disturb the ground, they catch the disturbed prey.

Cattle Egrets are small, short-necked egrets with white bodies and pale orange-brown patches on their heads, necks, and backs.

  • Bubulcus ibis
  • Length: 19 – 21 in (48 – 53 cm)
  • Weight: 17.98 oz (510 g)
  • Wingspan: 36 – 38 in (91 – 97 cm)

Cattle Egrets have a vast range around the world, but within North America, those in the south in Mexico, the Gulf Coast, and southwestern US states remain all year.

However, those that breed further north, mainly in eastern US states, migrate south after breeding.

You can find Cattle Egrets in native grasslands, pastures, crop fields, and rice fields, especially where there is hoofed livestock. 

Cattle Egret Calls:

Fun Fact: The Cattle Egret’s eyes have adapted to foraging on land by having binocular vision for judging distance to catch prey on land rather than correcting for light refraction when feeding in the water.

7. Wood Stork

Wood Stork

Wood Storks are found in Florida all year but their numbers increase from October to March. They are recorded in 7% of summer checklists and 17% of winter checklists.

Wood Storks are large wading birds that belong to the Ciconiidae family and are the only ones that breed in North America.

Their heads and necks are dark gray, scaly, and without feathers.

Their bodies are white except for the black flight feathers. Their bills are long, thick, and curved downward. Their legs and feet are dark and during the breeding season, their flesh-colored toes turn pink 

Males and females look similar. Juveniles have grayish, feathered heads and pale, yellow bills. 

  • Mycteria americana
  • Length: 35 – 45 in (89 – 114 cm) 
  • Weight: 96 oz (2721 g)
  • Wingspan: 65 in (165 cm)

Wood Storks remain all year around the Gulf Coast and southern Atlantic coast, but may move inland for breeding. They are also found in Central and South America.

You can find Wood Storks in open forested wetlands. During the breeding season, they prefer areas with a lot of trees, especially Taxodium trees, that are along a water’s edge. Water levels should be about four to twelve inches deep for them to forage successfully.

That is why swamps, ponds, marshes, and mangrove forests are ideal places to find them.

Wood Stork Calls:

Fun Fact: Wood Storks used to be called “wood ibis” because its head looks like an ibis. It has also been known as American Wood Stork because it is found in the Americas.

8. Ring-billed Gull

Ring billed gull
Ring-billed Gull – Breeding
Ring Billed Gull
Ring-billed Gull – Non-Breeding

Ring-billed Gulls spend winter in Florida but they are spotted all year along the coast of the state. They appear in 1% of summer checklists and 22% of winter checklists.

Ring-billed Gulls are medium-sized gulls that are easily identified because of their short, yellow bills with a black ring around them near the tip.

Breeding adults are generally white all-over except for their pale gray backs and wings with black tips and white spots. Their eyes are yellow, outlined with orange. They have yellow legs and feet. Males and females are similar. 

The major differences between breeding and non-breeding adults are the light brown streaks on the heads and necks of non-breeding adults.

Juvenile Ring-billed Gulls are covered in brown streaks all over.

  • Larus delawarensis
  • Length: 18 – 19 in (46 – 48 cm) 
  • Weight: 20.81 oz (590 g)
  • Wingspan: 47 – 48 in (119 – 122 cm)

Ring-billed Gulls breed in Canada and northern and northwestern US states. They migrate for winter to southern US states, the Pacific Coast, and Mexico.

You can find Ring-billed Gulls among many human developments – urban, suburban and agricultural areas. They also inhabit coastal waters, beaches, lakes, ponds, streams, estuaries, and mudflats. They are frequent visitors to parking lots, landfills, shopping malls, and reservoirs where they tend to group in large numbers.

Ring-billed Gulls calls:

Fun Fact: Ring-billed Gulls are sometimes called “fast food gulls” because they often hang out near fast food restaurants and scavenge for food there. 

9. Rock Pigeon

Rock Pigeons

Rock Pigeons are an introduced species in Florida and they are residents of the state all year. They occur in up to 7% of summer and winter checklists.

Rock Pigeons are well recognized around towns and parks and are usually blueish gray with two black bands on the wing and black on the tail tip. They have iridescent throat feathers and orange eyes.

However, they can also be white, spotted, or red.

  • Columba livia
  • Length: 11.8-14.2 in (30-36 cm)
  • Weight: 9.3-13.4 oz (265-380 g)
  • Wingspan: 19.7-26.4 in (50-67 cm)

Rock Pigeons do not migrate and can be found in all US states, southern Canada, and the Pacific Coast to Alaska.

You can find Rock Pigeons in cities, parks, and backyards, especially if there is birdseed on the ground. Some cities have ordinances against feeding pigeons as they are considered pests.

Rock Pigeon Call:

Fun Fact: Rock Pigeons have an amazing ability to find their way home using the earth’s magnetic field.

10. American White Pelican

American White Pelican
American White Pelican non-breeding
American white pelican breeding
American White Pelican breeding

American White Pelicans are usually spotted in Florida during winter from November to March, but some stay all year. They are recorded in 1% of summer checklists and 8% of winter checklists.

American White Pelicans are large soaring birds that have the second-largest average wingspan of any North American bird. 

Non-breeding adult American White Pelicans are white all over, except for black flight feathers that are only visible when in flight or when the wings are spread. Juveniles have light gray feathers with darker brown napes.

Breeding adult American White Pelicans are still white but they grow a yellow plate on their upper bills, like a horn, and around their eyes, bills and legs become brighter orange.

  • Pelecanus erythrorhynchos
  • Length: 60 – 63 in (152 – 160 cm)
  • Weight: 246.4 oz (6983 g)
  • Wingspan: 96 – 110 in (244 – 279 cm)

American White Pelicans breed in remote lakes inland in North America before spending the winter on the southern Pacific Coast of the US, the Gulf of Mexico, Mexico, and Central America. They can be spotted during migration in western and central US states.

You can find American White Pelicans in shallow freshwater lakes, wetlands, and edges of lakes and rivers. In the winter, you can find them in coastal bays, inlets, and estuaries where they forage in shallow water and rest on sandbars. 

American White Pelican calls: These birds are usually silent or only make a few grunts. However, the young can be noisy in the large colonies begging for food.

Fun Facts: The long and huge bill of the American White Pelican is capable of holding three gallons of water. When it scoops up fish from the sea, it tilts its bill down to drain the water so it can then swallow the fish that’s left inside its throat sac. 

11. Swallow-tailed Kite

Swallow-tailed Kite

Swallow-tailed Kites spend the breeding season in Florida and are mainly spotted from mid-February to September. They appear in 9% of summer checklists.

Swallow-tailed Kites are large but slender birds of prey that are most often seen hovering in the skies with their distinctive forked tail.

Males and females look similar. They have white heads and underparts and black bills, flight feathers, tails, and feet. Their underwings are both black and white. Their long, forked tails resemble a swallow’s hence the name “swallow-tailed”.

Juveniles are paler in comparison and their tails are not that deeply forked. 

  • Elanoides forficatus
  • Length: 19 – 25 in (48 – 64 cm)  
  • Weight: 15.6 oz (442 g)
  • Wingspan: 45 – 50 in (114 – 127 cm)

Swallow-tailed Kites are predominantly resident in South America but they breed around the Gulf Coast of the United States.

You can find Swallow-tailed Kites in swamps, marshes, and humid, lowland forests. When nesting, look for them in tall trees around open areas with an abundance of small prey to feed their young.

Swallow-tailed Kites almost always spend their time in flight so it’s best to look skyward when looking for them. Also, summer is the best time to see them since they migrate to South America for the winter. 

Swallow-tailed Kite Call:

Fun Fact: Swallow-tailed Kites are famous for their aerial acrobatics and they twist, turn, roll and dive whilst flicking their forked tail in pursuit of prey.

12. Northern Gannet

Northern gannet
Northern Gannet – Adult
Northern gannet Juvenile
Northern Gannet – Juvenile

Northern Gannets are winter birds in Florida and are spotted along the coast from November to May. They occur in 1% of winter checklists.

Northern Gannets are the largest among the gannet family and the largest seabird in the Western Palearctic. Males and females are similar in size and appearance.

They are generally white with a yellow-orange buff tinge on their heads, which may be darker during the breeding season. Their eyes and bills appear to be outlined in black.

Their wings are long and slender and have a dark-brown or black edge. Their bills and feet are gray. Their tails are all-white. 

Juveniles look nothing like the adults. They are brown overall with white spots. They also have no outline marking their eyes and bills. They have a white patch on their tails. Immatures appear as a combination of both the juvenile and adult.

  • Morus bassanus
  • Length: 35 – 40 in (89 – 102 cm)
  • Weight: 104 oz (2947 g)
  • Wingspan: 65 – 71 in (165 – 180 g)

Northern Gannets breed around coastal eastern Canada and spend the winter along the Atlantic coast of the United States. They are also found in western Europe and North Africa.

You can find Northern Gannets on the open ocean and large bays. Their nesting and breeding colonies are often on cliffs and rocky ledges of the Canadian Atlantic Coast. Bonaventure Island in Quebec is the largest colony in North America with 60,000 nests as of 2009. 

Northern Gannet Calls:

Fun Fact: It takes Northern Gannets five years to fully grow into their adult physical appearance.

13. Snowy Plover

Snowy Plover (Charadrius alexandrinus)
Snowy Plover Breeding
Snowy Plover non breeding
Snowy Plover non-breeding

Snowy Plovers are near-threatened species in Florida and are spotted along the western coast all year but, especially from June to September.

Snowy Plovers are small waders known for their run and pause motion on sandy beaches. They blend well into the landscape because of the sandy tones on their upperparts.

Breeding adults have dark patches on the front of their crowns, at the back of their eyes, and on the side of their upper breasts, like a partial collar. Their bills are short and black and their legs and feet are dark gray. 

Juveniles are a paler version of adults and have no dark face patches. Their upper parts are still a lighter sandy brown their neck stripe is also light. 

  • Charadrius nivosus
  • Length: 6 – 7 in (15 – 18 cm)
  • Weight: 1.4 oz (40 g)
  • Wingspan: 13 – 14 in (33 – 36 cm)

Snowy Plovers are residents all year along the Pacific Coast and Gulf Coast of the United States and Mexico, but those that breed inland migrate to the coast for winter.

You can find Snowy Plovers on sandy coastal beaches and dry salt flats. They are also seen on shallow lakes. They prefer salt water over freshwater though. Their breeding grounds require sparse vegetation as a protective cover for the eggs.

They employ a run-and-pause motion when catching prey.

Snowy Plover calls:

Fun Fact: Snowy Plovers have been listed as a threatened species since 1993 because the open nature of their nests makes it difficult to breed. Their nests on the beaches are prone to disturbance from humans or animals. 

14. Common Tern

Common Tern
Common Tern – Breeding
Common Tern,
Common Tern – Non-breeding

Common Terns are spotted along the coast of Florida mainly from July to October.

Common Terns are small to medium-sized seabirds considered one of the most widespread terns in North America.

Breeding Common Terns have distinct black caps and napes, white necks and chests, orange bills with a black tip, soft gray bodies which are lighter underneath, and orange legs. Their wings are dark-tipped and form a dark wedge on the upperside of the wingtips. Their tails are white and deeply forked. 

Non-breeding adult Common Terns lose the front portion of their black caps and are left with white foreheads. Their bills and legs turn black. 

Juveniles are a pale version of non-breeding adults.

  • Sterna hirundo
  • Length: 13 – 16 in (33 – 41 cm)
  • Weight: 5.15 oz (146 g)
  • Wingspan: 30 – 31 in (76 – 79 cm)

You can find Common Terns close to the water (whether freshwater or saltwater) as long as it’s in any open flat habitat like sand or shell beaches, firm dune areas, salt marshes, or islands during their breeding season.

In winter, Common Terns occur anywhere that has access to fish. They may be on natural sand and shell beaches, marine habitats, estuaries, and large inland lakes. They are also known to rest on boats, buoys, and piers.

Common Tern calls:

Fun Facts: In the 19th century, there was a huge decrease in the population of Common Terns due to fashion. Entire stuffed Common Terns were used to make hats in Europe and North America. 

15. Mute Swan

Mute Swan

Mute Swans are non-native species in Florida that can be spotted mainly in winter from November to mid-February. However, some can also be spotted in the state all year.

Mute Swans are one of the largest and heaviest flying birds. They are non-native and were introduced to grace ornamental lakes and ponds but now have escaped into the wild and bred. They cause problems for native wildlife and can be aggressive.

They are entirely white, with long, graceful necks, orange bills with a large, black basal knob, black around the base of the bill, and black legs. Adults look alike, although males are larger than females.

Juveniles don’t have orange-colored bills. Instead, they have dusky-pinkish bills. They may occasionally have dusky-brownish highlights on their body.

  • Cygnus olor
  • Length: 56 – 62 in (142 – 157 cm)
  • Weight: 416 oz (11789 g)
  • Wingspan: 84 – 96 in (213 – 244 cm)

Mute Swans were originally from Europe but have spread to the United States and southern Canada. They are predominantly found in eastern US states but smaller populations are now widespread.

You can find numerous Mute Swans in city parks, protected bays, and lakes. You may also find them in shallow wetlands, rivers, and estuaries.

Mute Swans Call:

Fun Fact: Adult swans are highly protective of their young and will aggressively defend them when they sense danger or threats. They will hiss as a warning and will immediately chase and attack the predator if the warning is ignored.

16. Whooping Crane

whooping crane

Whooping Cranes are endangered species in Florida but there have been sightings in the state during migration and winter.

Whooping Cranes are majestic birds with graceful courtship dances and trumpeting calls. They were so endangered that only around 20 survived in the 1940s but efforts to save them have increased their number to 600.

They have all-white bodies, a red crown, a black facial mask, and black feathers that are only visible in flight on their 7-foot wingspan. Their long legs are also black. 

Juveniles also have white bodies but they have several splotches of rust. Their heads and upper necks are rust-brown. 

  • Grus americana
  • Length: 52 in (132 cm)
  • Weight: 204.8 oz (5804 g)
  • Wingspan: 87 in (221 cm)

Whooping Cranes breed in a small area in Canada and migrate to Texas and a reintroduced population that breeds in Wisconsin migrates to Florida.

You can find Whooping Cranes in shallow wetlands and plenty of bulrushes and aquatic plants during the breeding season. Their wintering grounds are shallow bays, tidal flats, and estuarine marshes and sometimes on nearby farmlands and rolling grasslands. 

Whooping Crane Calls:

Fun Fact: The Whooping Crane has the distinction of being the tallest bird native to North America at nearly five feet tall, nearly as tall as a human and they have been taught their migration routes to reintroduced areas by following ultralight aircraft. 

17. Snow Goose

Snow Goose

Snow Geese are recognized as regularly occurring in Florida and are mainly spotted during winter, from October to April.

The Snow Goose is aptly named because this goose is totally white except for its black wingtips, pink bill with a black grin patch, and pink legs and feet.

Interestingly, it has another variant, called the Blue Goose, which has a white head but a dark blue-gray body. Both variants of the Snow Geese may occasionally have a “stained” head due to their feeding. 

The sexes of both variants are similar though they may vary in size. Males tend to be larger than females.

Juvenile white morphs have a dusky gray-brown coloring, and juvenile blue morphs are dark gray. However, they both still have the recognizable pink bill and black grin patch.

  • Anser caerulescens
  • Length: 25 – 31 in (64 – 79 cm)
  • Weight: 81.13 oz (2299 g)
  • Wingspan: 54.3 in (138 cm)

Snow Geese breed mainly in Canada and spend winter in the United States.

You can find Snow Geese and Blue Geese together in freshwater marshes and agricultural grain fields. In winter, they favor salt marshes and coastal bays, but they still visit plowed cornfields or wetlands.

Snow Goose Call:

Fun Fact: Snow Geese choose the same color morph as themselves when breeding and will mate for life.

18. White-tailed Kite

White tailed Kite

White-tailed Kites do not migrate and are spotted in the south of Florida all year.

White-tailed kites are small graceful raptors with white faces and underparts and dark gray wings.

Their eyes are red and their hooked bills are black. Their tails are short, square, and pale gray. Males and females look similar.

Juveniles have a reddish-brown coloring on their crowns and breasts, but they have similar white faces, dark shoulders, and gray wings as the adults. 

  • Elanus leucurus
  • Length:  15 – 17 in (38 – 43 cm)
  • Weight: 12 oz (340 g)
  • Wingspan: 40 – 42 in (102 – 107 cm)

White-tailed Kites are resident all year in southern US states and along the Pacific Coast.

You can find White-tailed Kites within a limited range in the United States. They are usually in open savannahs, desert grasslands, cultivated fields, and partially cleared lands hovering into the wind.

During the non-breeding season, it’s easy to spot them since they roost communally on trees and tall shrubs at the edge of grasslands. 

White-tailed Kite Call:

Fun Fact: White-tailed Kites hover in one position while hunting by facing into the wind and fluttering their wings – this is known as ‘kiting’.

19. Ross’s Goose

Ross's Goose

Ross’s Geese spend winter in Florida, from November to April, but they are not very common here.

Ross’s Geese are pretty similar to Snow Geese, whom they often flock with. They are white all over except for their short, gray-based red-orange bills, short and stubby, pink-red legs and feet, and black wingtips. Both sexes are similar, but the female is slightly smaller. 

There is a dark phase variant of Ross’s Goose, but it’s extremely rare. It has a white head, a brownish bill with a red patch, dark gray throats, underparts, and back.

  • Anser rossii
  • Length: 21 – 26 in (53 – 66 cm)
  • Weight: 59.2 oz (1678 g)
  • Wingspan: 47 – 54 in (119 – 137 cm)

Ross’s Geese breed in northern Canada and spend the winter in the United States.

You can find Ross’s Geese in salt and freshwater marshes during winter. During the breeding season, they will nest on the arctic tundra. 

Ross’s Goose Call:

Fun Fact: Ross’s Geese are the smallest geese in North America.

20. White-tailed Tropicbird

White-tailed Tropicbird

White-tailed Tropicbirds are not often spotted in Florida but you might spot a few along the eastern coast of the state during the breeding season.

White-tailed Tropicbirds are slender, graceful birds. Adult White-tailed Tropicbirds have mainly white bodies but their defining feature is their long, white tail streamers that can reach up to 17 inches long.

Their eyes have a black mask that extends past the eye, and their bills are yellow-orange. They have black markings on their backs, like a “V” when seen in flight. Their wings also have black edges. They have yellow legs and feet and black webbed toes.

Juveniles are similar to adults except that they have black spots on their crowns, their bills are pale and black-tipped, they have black, scaled patterns on their backs, and most of all, they lack the tail streamers that define their species. 

  • Phaeton lepturus
  • Length: 28 – 32 in (71 – 81 cm)
  • Weight: 14.46 oz (410 g)
  • Wingspan: 35 – 38 in (89 – 97 cm)

White-tailed Tropicbirds are found around the world’s tropical and sub-tropical oceans. In North America, they are found mainly in Hawaii and Florida, but it also reaches as far as Canada along the East Coast.

You can find White-tailed Tropicbirds on tropical islands and the ocean and waters surrounding these islands. They spend most of their time in the open sea unless they’re nesting, in which case, they’ll be seen on rocky cliffs. 

White-tailed Tropic Bird calls:

Fun Fact: The legs of the White-tailed Tropicbird are located far back on their body making it impossible for them to walk on land, instead they lie on their chest and drag themselves.

How Frequently White Birds Are Spotted In Florida In Summer And Winter

Checklists are a great resource to find out which birds are commonly spotted in your state. These lists show which white birds are most frequently recorded on checklists on ebird in summer and winter in Florida.

White Birds in Florida in summer:

White Ibis 32.2%
Great Egret 31.6%
Great Blue Heron 24.0%
Little Blue Heron 21.4%
Snowy Egret 20.5%
Cattle Egret 15.0%
Swallow-tailed Kite 9.7%
Rock Pigeon 7.9%
Wood Stork 7.5%
Ring-billed Gull 1.3%
American White Pelican 1.2%
Snowy Plover 1.0%
Common Tern 0.8%
Northern Gannet 0.3%
Mute Swan 0.2%
Whooping Crane 0.1%
White-tailed Kite 0.1%
White-tailed Tropicbird <0.1%
Snow Goose <0.1%
Ross’s Goose <0.1%

White Birds in Florida in winter:

Great Egret 38.0%
White Ibis 36.7%
Great Blue Heron 33.7%
Little Blue Heron 29.0%
Snowy Egret 24.4%
Ring-billed Gull 22.3%
Wood Stork 17.1%
Cattle Egret 13.8%
American White Pelican 8.6%
Rock Pigeon 7.1%
Northern Gannet 1.8%
Snowy Plover 0.6%
Swallow-tailed Kite 0.4%
Mute Swan 0.3%
Snow Goose 0.2%
Whooping Crane 0.2%
White-tailed Kite 0.1%
Common Tern 0.1%
Ross’s Goose <0.1%
White-tailed Tropicbird <0.1%