Great Cormorant

Description
35-40". A large, thick-necked cormorant. Adult black with white throat and yellow chin pouch; in breeding plumage, has white flank patches. Immature is dull brown, with dusky neck and white on belly.
Voice
Deep guttural grunts
Habitat
Sea cliffs, rocky coasts, and inshore waters.
Nesting
3 or 4 chalky, pale blue-green eggs in a nest of sticks lined with seaweed, placed on isolated cliffs or rocky islands.
Other
The largest member of its family, the well-named Great Cormorant is widespread in the Old World but nests only along the eastern coast of Canada in the New World. In the Far East, birds of this species are trained to catch fish, wearing a neck ring to prevent them from swallowing what they catch; well-trained birds can be sent out without a ring. The Great Cormorant has increased in numbers in recent decades, and dozens may now be observed in winter on offshore rocks where a single bird would have been a real find just a few years ago.
Picture
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