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n“Climate change is a big driver in northward expansion of bird ranges, and this fits within that pattern,” Hitchcox tells the Portland Press Herald. “It is definitely a factor, but it’s hard to know with a sample size of one. A lot of these waterbirds have weird expansions and retractions.”nnIndeed, Hitchcox described this time of year as the “rarity season” when “just about anything can show up,” he said, this time to Bangor News Daily.nnTheir name comes from the Indigenous Tupi people of Brazil, according to Sarah Kuta of Smithsonian, who called them “devil birds” or “evil spirit of the woods.” Their no doubt striking appearance has also led to them being dubbed “water turkeys” and “snake birds” because of the way their long, black, serpentine necks seem to move like snakes through the water.nnSHARE This Incredible Sighting With Your Friends Who Love Birdwatching…

