bubulcus
Noun 1. A genus of herons: Bubulcus is a genus of birds in the heron family, Ardeidae. It is most commonly associated with a single widespread species. 2. [Often capitalized in scientific contexts]: The word is primarily used as a proper noun, the genus name for the cattle egret.
Bubulcus is a specialized term used almost exclusively in scientific, zoological, or birdwatching contexts. In common language, the bird it refers to is called the "cattle egret." - The genus Bubulcus was once considered monotypic, containing only the cattle egret. - Recent taxonomic studies sometimes split it into two species: the Western Cattle Egret (Bubulcus ibis) and the Eastern Cattle Egret (Bubulcus coromandus).
- Scientific Classification: " is commonly seen following grazing cattle."
- Ornithology Text: "The genus is distinguished from other egrets by its shorter, thicker neck and its commensal relationship with large mammals."
- In Binomial Nomenclature: The word is always italicized when used as a genus name. The first letter is capitalized.
- Example: The scientific name for the cattle egret is Bubulcus ibis.
- Cattle Egret (noun): The common English name for the bird(s) of the genus .
- Ardeidae (noun): The biological family (herons, egrets, bitterns) to which the genus belongs.
- Egret (noun): A general term for various herons, typically those with white plumage.
- Cattle Egret: This is the standard common name and functional synonym in non-scientific English.
- Buff-backed Heron: An older, less common name for the same bird.
The provided reference context "small white egrets" is a general description. Specifically, Bubulcus refers to egrets that are often white but develop buff-colored plumage during the breeding season. Their most defining characteristic is not solely their color but their behavioral symbiosis with grazing animals.