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Big Bend National ParkMembers of the 1936 International Park Commission at Boquillas
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Big Bend National Park
Big Bend's Bird Specialties
Bird collage (clockwise starting in left hand corner: white winged dove, Gray Hawk, Mexican Jay, Ruby Throated Hummimgbird, Scaled Quail, and Turkey Vulture)
Bird collage (clockwise starting in left hand corner: white winged dove, Gray Hawk, Mexican Jay, Ruby Throated Hummimgbird, Scaled Quail, and Turkey Vulture)
 

Each of these species is evocative of Big Bend National Park. Each is a Southwestern U.S. species that spends much, if not all of the year in the park (doesn’t just migrate through). With some effort, each is observable within the park and is part of a classic group of Big Bend birds.

  • Gray Hawk
  • Zone-tailed Hawk
  • Common Black Hawk
  • Scaled Quail
  • White-winged Dove
  • Inca Dove
  • Greater Roadrunner
  • Elf Owl
  • Lesser Nighthawk
  • Lucifer Hummingbird
  • Blue-throated Hummingbird
  • Magnificent Hummingbird
  • Golden-fronted Woodpecker
  • Ladder-backed Woodpecker
  • Ash-throated Flycatcher
  • Black Phoebe
  • Vermillion Flycatcher
  • Mexican Jay
  • Verdin
  • Cactus Wren
  • Black-tailed Gnatcatcher
  • Black-capped Vireo
  • Curve-billed Thrasher
  • Crissal Thrasher
  • Phainopepla
  • Gray Vireo
  • Colima Warbler
  • Pyrrhuloxia
  • Varied Bunting
  • Canyon Towhee
  • Black-throated Sparrow
  • Cassin’s Sparrow
  • Black-chinned Sparrow
  • Rufous-crowned Sparrow
  • Scott’s Oriole
  • Hepatic Tanager


Johnnie Ward, 1886  

Did You Know?
Ward Mountain (6,925'/2,111m), which forms the southern boundary of "The Window" is named for Johnnie Ward, a cowboy who worked for the G4 ranch in the Big Bend area in the mid-1880s.

Last Updated: July 30, 2006 at 10:03 EST