The Little Egret (*Egretta garzetta*) is an elegant, slender white heron found across a wide range spanning southern Europe, Africa, Asia, and Australia, with a population that has been steadily expanding northward and westward in recent decades. It is a smallish heron, standing about 55–65 cm (22–26 inches) tall, and is entirely snow-white in plumage, making it easy to spot as it wades through shallow wetlands, estuaries, marshes, and coastal lagoons. One of its most distinctive features is its contrasting black bill and legs paired with striking bright yellow feet, which it uses in an active and almost playful hunting technique — shuffling and stamping through the shallows to flush out prey such as fish, frogs, insects, and crustaceans. During the breeding season, adults develop beautiful long, wispy plumes on their backs and chests, called aigrettes, which were so prized by the fashion industry in the late 19th century that the species was hunted nearly to extinction in some areas — a crisis that helped spark early conservation movements. The Little Egret is highly adaptable and equally comfortable in coastal and inland habitats, often seen standing motionless at the water's edge or stalking briskly with deliberate, graceful steps. In the United Kingdom, where it was once a rare vagrant, it has now become a common and beloved resident following a remarkable natural range expansion beginning in the 1990s.
- Subject Matter: Wildlife, birds
- Collections: Birds, Digital photography , Mixed Media , Wildlife