Double-Crested Cormorant (Phalacrocorax auritus)

Group Cormorants
Code ABNFD01020
Order Pelecaniformes
Family Phalacrocoracidae
Author (Lesson, 1831)
Rank G5 (definitions)
Occurrence SM (definitions)
Scale N (definitions)

County List:

Western UP Houghton, Marquette, Dickinson, Ontonagon, Delta, Baraga
Eastern UP Mackinac, Alger, Chippewa
Northern LP Emmet, Leelanau, Midland, Bay, Arenac, Cheboygan, Alpena, Charlevoix
Southern LP Jackson, Monroe, Saginaw, Muskegon

Rule:

Forested or Mixed Forested/Nonforested Landscapes

Foraging and Nesting Habitat Requirements may be distributed over the NEIGHBORHOOD

Foraging Habitat:
      Lake or River

Nesting Habitat 1st alternative:
      (Lake or River)
   adjacent to:
      ((Swamp Hardwoods (Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven)) 
      or (Bottomland Hardwoods (Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven)) 
      or (Mixed Lowland Conifer (Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven)) 
      or (Mixed Lowland Hardwood (Sm Saw or Lg Saw or Uneven))

Nesting Habitat 2nd alternative:
      (Lake or River)
   containing:
      Snags
view decision rule term definitions

Habitat List:

Habitats Regen Sap Pole Sm Saw Lg Saw Uneven
Aspen nonononono-
Paper Birch nonononono-
Oak nononononono
Assorted Hardwoods nononononono
Northern Hardwoods nononononono
Spruce/Fir nononononono
Hemlock nononononono
Jack Pine nononononono
Red Pine nononononono
White Pine nononononono
Conifer Plantations nonononono-
Mixed Upland Hardwoods nononononono
Mixed Northern Hardwoods nononononono
Mixed Upland Conifer nononononono
Mixed Pine nononononono
Swamp Hardwoods nononoYESYESYES
Balsam Poplar & Swamp Aspen & Swamp Birch nononononono
Bottomland Hardwoods nononoYESYESYES
Tamarack nononononono
Northern White Cedar nononononono
Black Spruce nononononono
Mixed Lowland Hardwoods nononoYESYESYES
Mixed Lowland Conifer nononoYESYESYES
Non-ForestedLake, River
Special FeaturesSnags, Riparian

view size class definitions

Literature:

Ludwig, J. P. 1991. Double-crested Cormorant. Pages 102-103 In: R. Brewer, G. A. McPeek, and R. J. Adams, Jr. (eds.) The atlas of breeding birds of Michigan. Michigan State University Press, East Lansing. 594 pp.

Habitat: This colonial breeder nests on rocky coasts, islands, and inland on some larger lakes and rivers. Roughly a third of the nests are placed in trees, where they resemble small Great Blue Heron nests. The rest of the nests are typically placed on the ground, built of coarse short sticks and often in layers added year after year.

Great Lakes cormorants eat small fish, such as alewives, smelt, yellow perch, and nine-spined sticklebacks.


Kaufman, K. 1996. Lives of North American Birds. Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston, Massachusetts. 675 pp.

Habitat: Coasts, bays, lakes, rivers. Very adaptable; may be found in almost any aquatic habitat from rocky northern coasts to mangrove swamps to large reservoirs to small inland ponds. Nests in trees near or over water, on sea cliffs, or on ground on islands.

Diet: Fish and other aquatic life. Diet varies with season and place, includes very large variety of fish, also crabs, shrimp, crayfish, frogs, salamanders, eels; sometimes snakes, mollusks, plant material.

Nest: Site is near water on cliff ledge, on ground on island, or at any height in tree.


Doepker, R. 2000. Personal Communication.

Cormorants at Groveland Mine, MI nest in snags over water.