Birds Galore! Spectacular Photos of Florida’s Nesting Boom

Thanks to optimal conditions, wading birds are breeding in huge numbers throughout the Everglades this year

When the conditions are just right, the Everglades become聽a sprawling, soggy,聽chick-making machine, supporting unfathomable numbers of nesting wading birds. And this spring, thanks to an especially rainy June and an early September聽deluge聽from Hurricane Irma,聽Florida's famous ecosystem is flush with water and experiencing near-perfect conditions. The result has been a聽huge spike in breeding聽birds.聽

The聽numbers are mind-boggling: almost 8,000 Great Egret nests, up to 18,000 White Ibis pairs, and more than聽28,000 White Ibis nests in total. In聽the Everglades Protection聽Area, which includes Everglades National Park, surveyors have tallied more than 2,800 Wood Storks. At , staff have counted more than 400 Wood Stork nests聽since December.聽The birds had聽mostly abandoned the place until recently.聽And in the Florida Bay, an estimated 400 pairs of Roseate Spoonbills began nesting as early as November.聽

These counts聽are some of the highest in and聽welcome news for聽researchers and conservationists, who had been watching Florida's wading-birds nesting numbers shrink until last year, which was another benchmark breeding season in the past quarter century. But the Everglades are resilient, and despite more than a century of human inteference and engineering, when the water levels are high聽and age-old natural processes are allowed to take place, the landscape聽can rev right back up.聽聽

For聽our recent story covering the nesting boom, 探花精选 asked photographer Mac Stone to document the scene. After two shoots鈥攂oth of which included aerial sessions in planes鈥擲tone captured in jaw-dropping detail聽not only the colonies, but also the size聽and splendor聽of the Everglades. Despite having spent significant time photographing birds there聽and even working as a field biologist monitoring Roseate Spoonbills for 探花精选, Stone says he wasn't prepared for what he witnessed from above.聽

"Flying over and all of the sudden the entire island is white with birds, you kind of have to rub your eyes and question if what you're seeing is real," he says. "When they鈥檙e in the super colonies, you look down and it's聽like every piece of real estate is taken up with nesting birds."聽

We featured a handful聽of Stone's聽photos in our聽original story, but with so many amazing images to choose from, we had聽to share more. The聽birds and rookeries shown below are surely a positive sign, but they are also a reminder of how far we have to go. While the聽abundance is impressive,聽it still pales in comparison to what is believed to be the Everglades' historical nesting highs. Considering the sheer size of this year's colonies, it's hard to imagine what those historic gatherings聽looked like. And though聽it is unlikely that we'll ever see those numbers again, if we continue to restore and preserve the Everglades, perhaps the聽nesting boom of 2018聽will eventually become the new normal.聽

"This is the Everglades that we all envision and hope to see every year," Stone says. "It鈥檚 really encouraging."聽