Bill filed to change Florida’s state bird

Pink flamingos appearing more often in the South Florida wild again

ISLAMORADA, Fla. – A state representative from the Florida Keys has filed a bill to make the American flamingo Florida’s official state bird.

State Rep. Jim Mooney (R-Islamorada) filed the bill last week, also asking lawmakers to consider making the scrub-jay the official state songbird.

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According to the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, American flamingos have been observed along much of the state’s coast; however, outside of Hialeah, more than 95% of observations have occurred within the Everglades, Biscayne Bay and the Florida Keys. In addition, flamingos are increasingly being reported in the shallow treatment wetlands created along the northern fringe of the Everglades.

Photographer Valerie Preziosi shares this recent photo of a flamingo in the Florida Keys. (Courtesy photo)

The FWC considers flamingos native to Florida. Flamingos were native to Florida but disappeared from the state around the turn of the 20th century. After about 1925, people started captive colonies of flamingos in South Florida, including a breeding colony at Hialeah Park Race Track in the 1930s, which still remains. A growing body of evidence over the years suggests that at least some American flamingos in Florida have arrived on their own from outside of the state. The FWC treats flamingos as native species protected under the Federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act.

After Hurricane Idalia in 2023, the rose-colored birds were spotted in the Everglades and hanging around in the Florida Keys.

If passed, the bill would take effect on July 1.


About the Author
Veronica Crespo headshot

Veronica Crespo writes for Local10.com and also oversees the Español section of the website. Born and raised in Miami, she graduated from the University of Miami, where she studied broadcast journalism and Spanish.

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