Wood Stork, a bird (see Hunn, attestations)
CUA-PETLA-HUAC, Wood Stork (Mycteria americana) [FC: 32 Quapetlaoac] “It is a bald-head –big, tall, the same as the [Great Blue Heron, axoquen]. Its head is large…. Featherless, bald, bare to the back of its head. The sides of its head are chili-red, reaching to its neck [?]. It is long-necked. Its bill is very thick as well as cylindrical, long, like a bow. Its breast is black. Its back, its wings are completely ashen, except that the wing-bends are very black. It tail is short, black. This quapetlaoac slod comes when [water] birds come. It is quite rare.” Martin del Campo identified this bird as the “wood ibis,” now known as the Wood Stork. The description fits very well, except for the red “sides of the head,” which could be due to confusion with the Wood Stork’s close relative, the Jabiru (Jabiru mycteria).
the wood ibis