The wood stork is the only species of stork that breeds in the
United States. Precipitous declines in their range and numbers in
Florida during the early to mid 1900s resulted in the wood stork
being listed as an endangered species.
The wood stork is a large, long-legged wading bird that is a
member of the stork family (Ciconiidae). It is distantly
related to herons, egrets, and ibises (Order:
Ciconiiformes). However, recent genetic studies suggest
storks are more closely related to the new world vultures (Family:
Carthartidae). The wood stork is our only native stork
that occurs in the United States. Wood storks also are found in
Central America and South America.
Wood storks are about 35-45 inches in length with a wing span of
about 60-65 inches. The plumage is white except for iridescent or
glimmering black feathers along the entire wing and tail. The head
and upper neck of adult storks do not have feathers, but are
covered with a rough, scaly skin that is gray-colored. The legs and
bill are a black tone but the toes have a pink hue. Unlike herons,
storks fly and soar with the neck and legs extended. Whereas
nestling storks utter a variety of calls and sounds, adult storks
are nearly voiceless and make only hissing sounds. However, the
stork will produce a loud sound by snapping their bills during
courtship or aggressive behaviors.
Wood storks are highly social in their nesting habits, often
nesting in large colonies of 100-500 nests. Historically, there
were reports of stork colonies estimated to be as large as
1,200-5,000 nests in the Big Cypress and Everglades of south
Florida. Wood storks feed mostly on fish, in water between 2-15
inches in depth, where the water is calm and uncluttered by aquatic
vegetation. Storks have a very specialized tactile foraging
behavior whereby they move their partially-opened bill through the
water in a side-to-side motion, often using their feet to rake or
scare up aquatic prey. Once the bill detects a fish, the bill is
snapped shut in one of the quickest reflex reactions among animals.
Locating prey using tactile location allows storks to forage in
muddy water but requires a relatively high prey density to be
effective. Thus, storks tend to forage in wetlands that have long
annual wet periods followed by drying conditions to concentrate
prey during the spring and early summer months for successful
breeding seasons.

Historically, wood storks were a common species throughout the
southeastern United States. However, precipitous declines in stork
range and populations occurred during the first half of the 1900s
because of the stork's specialized foraging attribute and the loss
of wetlands used for foraging, especially in south Florida.
Ultimately, the United States population was listed as endangered
by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in 1984 and by the Florida
Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission (FWC) in 1988. While the
number of stork nests and colonies in Georgia and South Carolina
appeared to increase during the 1980s and 1990s, storks still
experience continued nesting related problems in Florida,
especially south Florida. Recently, storks have established a
colony in North Carolina.
The success of wood stork fledging, or the process in which a
bird grows to be independent of its parents, often is variable
among different years and colonies suggesting food resources are
the likely factor in differences in nestling survivorship and
fledging rates. Based on statewide surveys conducted by FWC
personnel, stork colonies increased from 32 colonies during 1976-78
to 52 colonies during 1986-87, but decreased to 34 colonies in
1999. The most recent survey indicated about 7,216 nesting pairs in
Florida during 2005.