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Flamingos still being seen in Florida, one year after Hurricane Idalia delivered them

Chad Gillis | Fort Myers News-Press

Hurricane Idalia brought hundreds of flamingos from Mexico to the eastern United State just over a year ago, and it appears some of the birds are lingering in the Sunshine State.

Florida has long had a love affair with American flamingos (Phoenicopterus ruber). Our lottery tickets boast the image of a flamingo, although some researchers doubt the bird actually lived here in large numbers.

There was even a town named Flamingo, which now exists as a major entry point into Everglades National Park and Florida Bay.

And now it seems the birds may be here to stay after being swept up by Hurricane Idalia and blown here.

Since Idalia, Florida has a least a few dozen of the giant pink birds, mostly strung along coastal preserves and undeveloped mangroves islands.

Standing about 5 feet tall and weighing up to 8 pounds, flamingos are distributed across much of the Caribbean.

Last summer the birds were strung out across much of the eastern United States, in places like Ohio ― more than 1,000 miles away from their home Mexico.

See photos and read where the flamingos have been seen on naplesnews.com.

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