Yummy
Roseatte Spoonville munches on a 'yummy' treat.
Shortly after the SpaceX Falcon Heavy USSF-44 launch this Spoonbill continued on its path of finding treats.
The Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge was born from the land set aside as a buffer to the space center - wins for everyone.
Roseate spoonbills are large long-legged wading birds found in the Americas. Adults have a bare greenish head and a white neck, back and breast (with a tuft of pink feathers in the center when breeding), and are otherwise a deep pink. The colors can range from pale pink to bright magenta, depending on age, whether breeding or not, and location. Unlike herons, spoonbills fly with their necks outstretched, and they alternate groups of stiff, shallow wingbeats with glides.
Roseate spoonbills are resident breeders in South America mostly east of the Andes, and in coastal regions of the Caribbean, Central America, Mexico, the Gulf Coast of the United States, and from central Florida's Atlantic coast at least as far north as South Carolina's Myrtle Beach. These birds inhabit coastal marshes, bays, lagoons, mangroves, and mudflats.
Yummy
Roseatte Spoonville munches on a 'yummy' treat.
Shortly after the SpaceX Falcon Heavy USSF-44 launch this Spoonbill continued on its path of finding treats.
The Merritt Island National Wildlife Refuge was born from the land set aside as a buffer to the space center - wins for everyone.
Roseate spoonbills are large long-legged wading birds found in the Americas. Adults have a bare greenish head and a white neck, back and breast (with a tuft of pink feathers in the center when breeding), and are otherwise a deep pink. The colors can range from pale pink to bright magenta, depending on age, whether breeding or not, and location. Unlike herons, spoonbills fly with their necks outstretched, and they alternate groups of stiff, shallow wingbeats with glides.
Roseate spoonbills are resident breeders in South America mostly east of the Andes, and in coastal regions of the Caribbean, Central America, Mexico, the Gulf Coast of the United States, and from central Florida's Atlantic coast at least as far north as South Carolina's Myrtle Beach. These birds inhabit coastal marshes, bays, lagoons, mangroves, and mudflats.