
June 11, 2026
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The Snail Kite, a specialized raptor dependent on apple snails, hunts in the shallow wetlands around Mérida during the summer breeding season when water levels and snail populations peak.
The wetlands around Mérida shimmer in the late morning heat, shallow pools scattered between stands of cattail and sedge. Water levels have risen with the summer rains, flooding the margins where apple snails cluster on submerged stems. If you are walking near water today, listen for the splash of a large bird dropping to the surface.
A snail kite hangs motionless above the marsh, slate-gray wings spread wide against the white sky. This threatened raptor has shaped its entire existence around one prey: the apple snail. The kite's bill curves into a sharp hook, designed precisely to extract snails from their shells. Its talons grip differently than other raptors, holding the rounded shell steady while the specialized bill works. When the kite spots movement below, it drops with controlled precision, feet first into the water.
Apple snails surface to breathe through a tube-like siphon, making them visible to hunting kites. During summer, these large freshwater snails reproduce rapidly in the warm, oxygen-rich shallows. The snails scrape algae from plant stems and filter particles from the water column, converting plant matter into protein that feeds not only snail kites but also limpkins, which probe the mud with their long bills for the same prey. The kites follow water levels closely. When summer rains flood new areas, snail populations expand, and the kites adjust their hunting territories accordingly. A single kite may cover several square kilometers, moving between productive pools as conditions change.
The kite that just landed carries its catch to a nearby perch, often a dead snag or the top of a palm. Here it performs the delicate work of extraction, using its bill tip to sever the muscle that holds the snail in its shell. The empty shells accumulate below favored perches, white spirals scattered on the ground like discarded pottery. Young kites must learn this technique through practice. Parents bring whole snails to the nest, and juveniles spend weeks mastering the precise movements needed to access their only food source. This specialization makes snail kites vulnerable to habitat changes, but it also makes them supremely efficient hunters when conditions are right.
The water stills after the kite's departure, rings spreading outward from where it touched down. Somewhere in the shallows, another snail extends its siphon toward the surface, and overhead, another kite begins its patient circle through the humid air.