View allAll Photos Tagged Belly

La Stefy e Silvan a confronto.

Mandal - Uttarakhand - India

Bar-bellied Pitta - Dong Nai, Vietnam

 

Bird Species (# 517) that I photographed and placed on my Flickr Photostream. Overall goal is 1000.

 

eBird Report and listing details - macaulaylibrary.org/asset/531455181

About to enjoy a snack just before sunset. Taken near Fort Myers, Florida a few years ago.

 

We're now away for a week so might be a bit hit and miss on Flickr but will try to keep up.

 

As always, thank you so much for stopping by and for leaving any comments or faves, they are very much appreciated.

 

Nikon D500, Sigma 60-600mm Sports lens, 600mm, f/7.1, 1/1000, ISO 400. Female woodpecker. View Large.

From Cornell:

 

These birds often stick to main branches and trunks of trees, where they hitch in classic woodpecker fashion, leaning away from the trunk and onto their stiff tail feathers as they search for food hiding in bark crevices. When nesting, males choose the site and begin to excavate, then try to attract a female by calling and tapping softly on the wood around or in the cavity. When a female accepts, she taps along with the male, then helps put the finishing touches on the nest cavity. At feeders, Red-bellied Woodpeckers will push aside most bird species other than Blue Jays.

Based on the name of this bird, one might assume that it has a bright red belly; however, the Red-bellied Woodpecker's "red belly" is only a small reddish area that is difficult to see in the field. This bird has a black and white barred back, white uppertail coverts, grayish white underparts, black chevrons on the lower flanks and undertail coverts, and barred central tail feathers. In flight a small white patch shows at the base of the primaries.

In adult males, the entire crown, from bill to nape, is red. In adult females, the red on the head is limited to the area just above the bill and nape. [text credit Houston Audubon}

  

It mainly eats nectar supplemented with arthropods, often joining mixed-species foraging flocks in the day, along with other sunbirds at large sources of nectar. In the late afternoon it regularly hawks insects aerially and gleans invertebrates from foliage.

 

South Africa, Kruger National Park

 

Please don't use my images without my permission. All images © Aivar Mikko.

Nikon D500, Sigma 60-600mm Sports lens, 380mm, f/8, 1/500, ISO 2500. Female. View Large.

Also known as Gray Plovers, they are the largest of the North American plovers. They can be found on six different continents during the winter season, but breed only on the Arctic tundra.

female RED-BELLIED WOODPECKER

is the same as White Headed Roller. I was confused and goggled to confirm.

 

Thank you my friends for popping by.

I really appreciate your visits, comments & favourites.

Wishing all my Flickr friends a Beautiful Day

 

Take care and stay safe everyone

 

Thank you

💓💓💓💓💓

A Red-bellied Woodpecker stops by the feeder before roosting for the evening. Shot at ISO 25,600. Glendale, Missouri

The blue-bellied roller is a large bird appr. 28–30 cm.

 

Gambia, Tujereng.

 

Please don't use my images without my permission. All images © Aivar Mikko.

 

Melanerpes Carolinus

Kirkwood, PA

 

RED-BELLIED WOODPECKER

Wild - at Trilha dos Tucanos. The maroon-bellied parakeet is a small parrot found from southeastern Brazil to north-eastern Argentina, including eastern Paraguay and Uruguay.

 

Happy Friday!

  

Thanks a lot for your visits, comments, faves, invites, etc. Very much appreciated!

 

© All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission. All rights reserved. Please contact me at thelma.gatuzzo@gmail.com if you intend to buy or use any of my images.

Female, Waterloo, ON, Canada

A Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (Sphyrapicus varius) searching for food in the rough bark of an old decaying poplar tree in the aspen parkland woods in central Alberta, Canada.

 

It looks a little ragged as there is a nest cavity nearby where it was continually entering and exiting to feed its young.

 

24 June, 2013.

 

Slide # GWB_20130624_4013.CR2

 

Use of this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission is not permitted.

© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.

About to head back to the tree and back to work.

This Northern Shoveler is standing in the rising tide but barely touching the water with his belly ;) Of course, he floats, he swims, he is in no danger. I was at Mud Bay at Homer, photographing the peeps, or at least waiting for them to get close enough for me to photograph them. Meanwhile this drake and his entourage satisfied my need for photons.

 

Taken 4 May 2023 at Homer, Alaska.

Red Bellied Woodpecker on the woodpile. He was having a time deciding on whether to eat peanut butter and cornmeal mix or black oil sunflower seeds. He couldn't decide on just one so he had both!

Harris Nature Center, Meridian Township, Michigan

Why red-bellied? As we plainly can see, this bird does not have a red belly. There are a few spots that look a little darker, but by the end of the mating season, they will have a slightly rosy (glow, lol, sorry) belly color, which distinguishes them from similar-appearing woodpecker species.

 

Female Red-bellied Woodpecker seen at Lake St. Clair Metropark.

female RED-BELLIED WOODPECKER

I'm back from my trip to North Carolina. My actual main reason of going is that North Carolina has the highest diversity of Salamanders in the world. So that was my main focus on the trip. I captured some other shots but I was mainly in search to photograph new species I don't have in my area.

 

This was the first salamander find of my trip. Black-bellied Salamanders are a relatively large and robust species measuring up to 8 inches in length. This species is in the dusky family which tend to look alike and make identification difficult.

 

I hope everyone enjoys this image!

A Black-bellied Plover in non-breeding plumage taken at Fort De Soto, Florida. Hoping to photograph a few in breeding plumage during our next trip there in a few weeks time.

 

As always, thank you so much for stopping by and for leaving any comments or faves, they are very much appreciated.

female RED-BELLIED WOODPECKER

A juvenile Yellow Bellied Sapsucker along the trails in Wawanosh Wetlands, Sarnia, ON

  

Empidonax Flaviventris

Right place, right time. We went looking for a special Warbler. Didn't find it, but this guy surprised us.

Schwenksville, PA

yellow-bellied toad

Gelbbauchunke

[Bombina variegata]

I adore these tiny miracles of nature. My husband held a small translucent photo umbrella over the wee spring hyacinths. I used manual focus with Live View to avoid resting my chin on soil. Still didn't quite do these beauties justice, darn it. I might try the 105mm macro to capture more of these little ones with a different focal point.

 

Thanks for your comments!

 

The "red belly" of the Red-bellied Woodpecker is often so faint that it is not seen. This picture shows a typical light reddish wash over the belly, and a male's full red crown.

 

Several small airplants are growing on the bark of the tree at Castellow Hammock Preserve, Florida

male Black-bellied Bustard in Kafue National Park, Zambia

(sometimes called Black-bellied Korhaan)

 

lissotis melanogaster (sometimes eupodotis melanogaster)

zwartbuiktrap

outarde à ventre noir

Schwarzbauchtrappe

 

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Please do not use my photos on websites, blogs or in any other media without my explicit permission.

Nikon Z 9, 800mm S PF, 1/500, f/8, ISO 5000. Male woodpecker.

Sphyrapicus Varius

New Britain, PA

 

A Black-bellied Plover taking a break from guard duty.

 

Wary and quick to give alarm calls, the Black-bellied Plover acts as a sentinel for groups of foraging shorebirds worldwide. Its quickness to sound the alarm allowed it to resist market hunters during the heyday of shorebird hunting, and the species remained common while other species crashed. ~ Cornell Lab of Ornithology

A red-bellied woodpecker. This is a male - distinguished by both a red head and nape.

 

Photographed along Joe Overstreet road. Amazingly, I saw and heard this woodpecker attempt to drill into a metal fence - I don't know why - see photo in comments.

 

From All About Birds:

 

These birds often stick to main branches and trunks of trees, where they hitch in classic woodpecker fashion, leaning away from the trunk and onto their stiff tail feathers as they search for food hiding in bark crevices. When nesting, males choose the site and begin to excavate, then try to attract a female by calling and tapping softly on the wood around or in the cavity. When a female accepts, she taps along with the male, then helps put the finishing touches on the nest cavity. At feeders, Red-bellied Woodpeckers will push aside most bird species other than Blue Jays.

  

Red Bellied Woodpecker having breakfast on the woodpile!

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