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Common Tern (Sterna Hirundo) female feeding young in the early morning on beach
Photo of seagulls feeding at a rice field in the Ribatejo district.
A scenic view of a Florida Sandhill Crane bird found in the wilderness
Names: Arctic fulmar, fulmar, mallemok, northern fulmar\nScientific name: fulmarus glacialis\nCountry: Iceland\nLocation: Westfjords
Sandwich Tern (Thalasseus sandvicensis) along the North sea coast during autumn migration in the Netherlands.
An great blue heron chick stands in its nest squawking for food.
Senboushimisaki coast in Rishiri
Ajax On
migrating snow geese leaving a farm field on their way south in November
Spoon-billed Sandpiper in Thailand
Terns breeding in whale Island watamu
Wild bird in outdoor sanctuary in Israel.
Guillemots in Farne Islands Nature Reserve, England.
A Masked Lapwing standing on a rock ledge in the morning sun.
A close-up of a common murre resting on a rock next to the shoreline
Underwater sea, Little Planet Format
Holidays in southern Corsica. Discovery of the Sanguinaires Islands, next to the city of Ajaccio
The Great-Tailed Grackle or Mexican Grackle (Quiscalus mexicanus) is a highly social North and South American medium-sized songbird.  The males are glossy black and iridescent and the females are brown and drab colored.  Although the grackle is black, it is not a blackbird.  It is sometimes mistaken for a crow but is not a member of that family either.  Great-tailed grackles originally came from the tropical lowlands of Central and South America but over the past 140 years have spread into North America.  Grackles forage in pastures, wetlands and mangroves for a wide variety of food.  They eat larvae, insects, nestlings, worms, tadpoles, fish and eggs.  They remove parasites from cattle and eat fruits and grains.  Grackles are highly intelligent birds that can solve complex problems to get food.  The male grackle has a distinctive noisy call.  They communally roost in trees at night and during the breeding season they build a nest in the trees.  This female grackle was photographed at Walnut Canyon Lakes in Flagstaff, Arizona, USA.
Seagull wildlife
Bearded reedling, Panurus biarmicus. The male bird sits on a reed stalk against the sky
White wagtail (Motacilla alba)
Sandpiper looking for food on the beach shore, on the wet sand in Asturiris, Spain
Great Blue Heron nest building by gathering sticks
Ringed Plover on beach at Borth, North Wales, UK
two swift chicks in their nest
Eine einzelne Möwe in der Luft
L 13,5-15,5cm.\nBreeds in reed beds, tall rushes and shrubbery on wet ground or at lake margins, also in drier sites.\nIn Britain and Ireland (and the Netherlands) resident, with immigrants from N and E Continent. to be seen from late September-April/May.\nMale easy to see in breeding season, sings from reed stem or bush top, but species otherwise  rather unobtrusive; flies off in springing slightly uneven and jerky flight, quickly taking cover in vegetation.\n\nIn the Netherlands quite common in the described Habitats.\n\nThis Picture is made on the Island of Texel (scan of Color Slide).
close up of the Ganggang Bayam bird or Himantopus leucocephalus standing on the rocks.
Kildeer on Grass
Free Images: "bestof:GRAT nest.JPG Grey-backed Tern Sterna lunata on egg USFWS Hawaiian Islands NWR 2006-06-23 Duncan Wright PD-USGov Onychoprion lunatus"
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