Data for:
© Rick Bowers
© Jacob Drucker
© Jacob Drucker
© Jacob Drucker

Hawaiian Crow Corvus hawaiiensis

Sign in to see your badges

Identification

POWERED BY MERLIN

This large, black, and extraordinarily loud bird vanished from Hawaiian forests in 2002. Fortunately it survived in aviaries, and captive bred birds began to be released back into the wild in 2016 in remote parts of the Big Island; early signs are promising with several pairs attempting to nest. Known to Native Hawaiians as ʻAlalā, it is the only crow or crow-like bird currently found on the archipelago. It is much bigger than the crows found on the US mainland, and is closer in size to a raven. Gives a variety of loud caws, croaks, and squeals.

POWERED BY MERLIN

Statistics

Sign in to see your stats

Weekly Bar Chart

JanuaryFebruaryMarchAprilMayJuneJulyAugustSeptemberOctoberNovemberDecember
Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Insufficient data Week Frequency: 0 Week Insufficient data Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Insufficient data Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Insufficient data Week Frequency: 0 Week Insufficient data Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Insufficient data Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0 Week Frequency: 0
Weekly Bar Chart

Range Map

Media

Top photos

Niagara--Hornblower Landing

Top audio

Niagara--Hornblower Landing

Top video

Niagara--Hornblower Landing