Trumpeter Swan

Cygnus buccinator

Order
Family
Genus
Species
Regional

This bird has been reportedly found in the following regions:

Anchorage, Alaska

Bella Vista, Arkansas

Brookfield, Illinois

Yale, Iowa

Gladstone, Michigan

Albertville, Minnesota

Oak Harbor, Ohio

Lubbock, Texas

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Gardener's Notes:
4 positives 0 neutral 0 negative
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D

DearSandra

Coos Bay, OR | January 2023 | Positive
I would love to help reintroduce them to my area, coastal southern Oregon, Coos Bay. We have lots of fresh, salt and brackish water, they would thrive here. Does anyone know who to contact regarding reintroduction?
W

Whatcom_Kat

Ferndale, WA | January 2023 | Positive
We have large flocks of Trumpeters in northern Washington state from November until March or April each year. Beautiful birds. They are now more numerous than Tundra Swans here during the winter.
A

Aiwen

Bella Vista, AR | January 2023 | Positive
There’s a small colony of these majestic birds that spend the winter near Greer’s Ferry Lake in Arkansas.
R

Rickwebb

Downingtown, PA | July 2015 | Positive
An absolutely beautiful bird that was almost exterminated in much of the lower 48 states of the USA in the late 1800's and early 1900's for meat and feathers. It survived in Alaska, western Canada, the Pacific Northwest, and Yellowstone Park. The Trumpeter Swan Society, headquartered in Minnesota, and other conservation organizations are restoring it back to Ontario and the upper Midwestern US as far east as Ohio and as far south as Kansas. I've only seen them at Brookfield Zoo just west of Chicago. This is the largest swan species and it makes calls similar to the Canadian Goose and other sounds.
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Arisaema Species
(Arisaema mayebarae)
(Heteropelma scaposum)
Wood Stork
(Mycteria americana)