Sign in

close

Registering for this site allows you to access your order status, history and manage any subscriptions. Just fill in the fields below, and we’ll get a new account set up for you in no time. We will only ask you for information necessary to make the purchase process faster and easier.

Create an Account

Shopping cart

close
  • No products in the cart.

What's the Difference Between a Heron and an Egret?

Written by: Nick Lund

|

Published on

|

Time to read 3 min

There are about 10 regular species of herons and egrets in America and they all share the basic description of being birds with long legs and long necks that hunt for fish in shallow water.

But beyond that, how do you tell them apart? How do you know which long-legged, long-necked wading birds are herons, and which ones are egrets? Well, I’ll let you in on a little secret right off the bat: scientifically speaking, there is no difference between a heron and an egret.

Take the Great Blue Heron and the Great Egret, for example. Despite their different names they’re actually closely-related species, both in the genus Ardea. They’re more closely related to each other than, say, the Great Egret is to the Snowy Egret (genus Egretta), or the Great Blue Heron is to the Green Heron (genus Butorides).

Stylized illustration of three heron and egret species standing indoors, showing varying heights, neck lengths, and leg proportions against a simple, colorful background.

So, then, is there something unscientific that separates herons and egrets? Something a little more rule-of-thumb? Yeah, there is: egrets are usually white, and herons are usually not-white.

It’s as simple as that. Early naturalists working to understand the relationships between birds looked at a bunch of white-colored birds fishing in the shallows and figured they were closely related, and called them egrets. They also saw a bunch of not-white birds fishing in the shallows and figured they were related, too.

This is still a helpful rule-of-thumb when trying to identify these birds! If you look out into the marsh and see a long-legged white bird, start thinking about Great Egret, Snowy Egret, or Cattle Egret. If you see a long-legged bird of another color (blue, usually) try Great Blue Heron, Little Blue Heron, or Tricolored Heron.

But, what’s most interesting isn’t really trying to tell the difference between a heron and an egret, it’s understanding how the different groups of birds – some with species called herons and some with egrets – differ from each other. Each genus has its own attributes, often dealing with diet and feeding behavior. Let me break it down.

Species of Herons and Egrets Found in North America

Genus Ardea.

Great Egret and Great Blue Heron. The biggest of our herons and egrets, these birds can grow to 4 feet tall. Both species have a wide distribution across the country, and are usually stand-and-wait predators: standing frozen in one place and watching for an unsuspecting fish (or frog, or rat, or lizard) to appear.

A Great Blue Heron stands motionless along the water’s edge, using its classic stand-and-wait hunting strategy to ambush passing prey.
A Great Blue Heron stands motionless along the water’s edge, using its classic stand-and-wait hunting strategy to ambush passing prey.
A Great Egret wades through shallow water, its bright white plumage and slow, deliberate movements suited for stalking fish and frogs.A Great Blue Heron stands motionless along the water’s edge, using its classic stand-and-wait hunting strategy to ambush passing prey.
A Great Egret wades through shallow water, its bright white plumage and slow, deliberate movements suited for stalking fish and frogs

Genus Egretta.

Snowy Egret, Tricolored Heron, Little Blue Heron, Reddish Egret. A smaller set of species, found mostly in the southeast or along the Gulf coast. Egretta birds are more active hunters, flushing prey by stalking, running, or shuffling through the shallows.

Close-up of a Tricolored Heron with slate-blue plumage, a long blue bill, and reddish eye, shown in profile against a softly blurred green background.
A Tricolored Heron pauses mid-hunt, its sleek profile and alert posture reflecting the active foraging style typical of Egretta species.

Genus Bubulcus.

Cattle Egret. This stocky species is a relatively recent transplant from the Old World, expanding their range from Africa to South America in the 1930s and then spreading into the United States in the last 50 years. They’re most often seen in fields, rather than wetlands, especially where cattle are present (go figure). 

Cattle Egret standing in short grass with buff-orange head and neck, white body, and yellow bill, scanning a field for insects.
A Cattle Egret stands in a grassy field, perfectly adapted to life alongside grazing livestock rather than in wetlands.

Genus Butorides.

Green Heron. This small, beautiful species is more secretive than other heron or egrets, and hunts for fish from the cover of tree-lined streams or ponds. They’re also famous for occasionally “bait fishing,” dipping a small twig or a live insect into the water to attract a fish. 

Green Heron perched on a low branch over water, showing dark greenish-black back, chestnut neck, yellow eye, and dagger-like bill against a blurred pond background.
A Green Heron crouches low on a branch above the water, using stealth and patience to ambush fish in shaded streams.

Genera Nycticorax and Nyctanassa.

Black-crowned Night Heron and Yellow-crowned Night Heron. These two fascinating species emerge at night, as their name implies, to hunt in wetlands, tidal areas, and beaches. They roost during the day hidden – sometimes not so well – in waterside trees.

Black-crowned Night Heron perched on a branch, showing gray wings, pale underparts, black cap, red eye, and stout black bill against a green background.
A Black-crowned Night Heron perches quietly during daylight hours, resting before its nocturnal foraging begins.
Yellow-crowned Night Heron perched on a fallen log, with slate-gray body, black-and-white facial pattern, yellow crown, and long white head plumes near tidal water.
A Yellow-crowned Night Heron stands alert on a log near shallow water, a coastal hunter adapted for nighttime feeding.

Related Reading