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Wattled Jacana

Jacana jacana
(Linnaeus, C, 1766)
Jacana
Jaçanã

Family: Jacanidae
Order: Charadriiformes
Class: Aves
Phylum / Division: Chordata
Kingdom: Animalia

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Records from Mercedes

Conservation status according to BirdLife International: Least Concern

Description: It is a medium-sized waterbird, easily recognized by its extremely long toes and claws, an adaptation that allows it to walk on floating vegetation. The plumage features chestnut wings and back, a black neck and breast, and a bright yellow frontal shield extending onto the forehead. The bill is straight and yellowish, and the legs are greenish. Both sexes look similar, although females are usually larger.

Geographic distribution: It is widely distributed throughout tropical and subtropical America, from southern Mexico and Central America to much of South America, including the Amazon basin and parts of Argentina, Paraguay, Uruguay, and Brazil. Its range is closely tied to wetlands rich in floating vegetation.

Habitat: It inhabits lagoons, marshes, swamps, flooded grasslands, rice fields, and shallow freshwater bodies, particularly those with floating plants such as water lilies and other macrophytes. It occurs in both natural and human-modified wetlands.

Feeding: The species has an omnivorous diet, feeding mainly on insects, other aquatic invertebrates, seeds, and plant material. It forages by walking across floating vegetation and picking prey from the water surface or plant stems.

Behavior: It is a territorial and active species, well known for its unusual breeding system. Females defend territories that may include several males, while males perform most of the incubation and chick-rearing. Vocalizations are sharp and frequent, especially during territorial disputes.

Nesting: Breeding is characterized by polyandry, with one female mating with multiple males. The nest is a floating platform of vegetation, anchored to aquatic plants. Each male incubates his clutch and cares for the chicks, which leave the nest shortly after hatching.

Conservation status: It is classified as Least Concern, owing to its wide distribution and stable populations. However, wetland degradation and pollution may cause localized impacts.


Author of this compilation: EcoRegistros – 22/12/2025





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 Reports


 Detail of places sorted by number of records








Page 1
Record IDDateExact timeCountryProvince / departmentPlaceFilmedPhotographedRecorded vocalObservedHeardWounded or deadNumber of individualsUser or BibliographyDetail
214698109/09/2024ArgentinaCorrientesPN Iberá--Portal Lobo Cuá, Mercedes1Diego Oscar
214624708/09/2024ArgentinaCorrientesPN Iberá--Portal Lobo Cuá, Mercedes2Diego Oscar
198569904/04/2023ArgentinaCorrientesVía sin nombre, Mercedes13Naré Berduc
210395214/05/2022ArgentinaCorrientesEa. Rincón del Socorro, Mercedes6Sabrina Godoy
210669913/05/2022ArgentinaCorrientesEa. Rincón del Socorro, Mercedes6Sabrina Godoy
210395113/05/2022ArgentinaCorrientesAuto selected -28.65440 -57.43085, Mercedes4Sabrina Godoy
210395412/05/2022ArgentinaCorrientes Corrientes, Mercedes2Sabrina Godoy
210395311/05/2022ArgentinaCorrientes Corrientes, Mercedes1Sabrina Godoy
156003704/03/2022ArgentinaCorrientes, Mercedes4Eugenia Boggiano
205878628/07/2021ArgentinaCorrientesPN Iberá--Portal Lobo Cuá, Mercedes3Lautaro Pereira
Page 1

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Citation recommended:

EcoRegistros. 2026. Wattled Jacana (Jacana jacana) - Species sheet. Acceded from https://www.ecoregistros.org on 20/03/2026.