the Western Grebe or Clark's Grebe (a bird); see Hunn, in attestations
Ā-CIH-TLI, Western Grebe/Clark’s Grebe (Aechmophorus occidentalis/A. clarkii) [FC: 31 Acitli] “It is also rare…. It comes when the various [water] birds come. Its head is quite small, black, with a pointed, chili-red bill. Its eyes are like fire. It is long-necked. Its body is small and straight, small and thick: its breast very white, its back black…. Its legs black: they are also somewhat toward its rump, like a duck’s legs. It lives there in the lagoon….” Martin del Campo identifies this bird as the Western Grebe. Since he wrote, this grebe has been split into two closely allied species, The Western Grebe and the Clark’s Grebe. The relative abundance of these two species in the central Mexican highlands is still unclear, though it is reasonable to assume that the Aztecs treated them as one. The name might be interpreted as “water hare” or “water grandmother” (cf. Karttunen 1983:34), though neither is made explicit in the original account.
the western grebe (a bird)