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Anhingas dive under water for prey. They spear their prey with their pointed
beak like an arrow. Sometimes an Anhinga's thrust is so powerful that
it has to swim to shore and pry the fish off its beak by rubbing it against
a rock. They primarily eat fish, but will also eat aquatic insects, crayfish,
leeches, shrimp, tadpoles, frog eggs, and even young alligators and water
snakes.
Usually Anhingas are found nesting and roosting in trees and bushes in
freshwater swamps, lakes, sluggish streams in sheltered and murky waters.
The Anhinga, like other aquatic birds, loves vegetation.Although it doesn't
eat the vegetation, these birds use it for protection from predators.
Near coastal areas, Anhingas can be found around brackish lagoons, and
in mangroves.
The female anhingas have a pale brown head, neck, and breast The males
are almost completely black. A juvenile Anhinga is brownish in color to
help it stay camouflaged from predators.
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