View allAll Photos Tagged CASPIAN

Tanji Beach, Kombo South, The Gambia

 

Back to some more Gull/Tern shots :)

Caspian tern

 

DJH05720-Edit

Not my sharpest shot - we were supposed to be having a sociable lunch but I kept getting side-tracked. I like that it has closed its nictating membrane so it doesn't get water in its eye. Taken at Bakau, Gambia

A Caspian Tern in flight.

Now I know this isn't going to attract much attention, nor is it going to win photographic plaudits, but it is my first self-found Caspian Gull at my local Ingbirchworth Reservoir, taken this afternoon. Caspian Gull used to be considered a race of Herring Gull but there are a number of features that distinguish it and was formally split in 2007. At this time of year it has a pure white head unlike the brown-streaked heads of Herring Gulls. The bill is long and looks parallel-sided because it doesn't have much of a swelling on the lower mandible (known as the gonys). The long bill is accentuated by a shallowly sloping forehead. The eye is also usually dark, and it has longer wings and legs than Herring Gull. If you compare with a Herring Gull they really do have a different look about them: www.flickr.com/photos/timmelling/29977777457/in/photolist

 

Caspian gulls breeds around the Black and Caspian Seas, extending eastwards across Central Asia to north-west China. In Europe, it has been spreading north and west and now breeds in Poland and eastern Germany, where they come into contact with Herring Gulls and sometimes interbreed. Some Caspian Gulls migrate south as far as the Red Sea and Persian Gulf, while others disperse into Western Europe. Small numbers are now seen regularly in Britain. Its scientific name Larus cachinnans translates as "laughing gull" from the call: www.xeno-canto.org/580768 . Confusingly there is another bird called Laughing Gull (Leucophaeus atricilla).

Scarborough Bluffs

Scarborough, Ontario

June 9, 2019

394A7082

Seen from the pontoon boat along Rondeau's sand spit near Erieau.

 

Hydroprogne caspia

 

The oldest recorded wild Caspian Tern was at least 29 years, 7 months old when it was found in Louisiana in 1989. It had been banded in Michigan in 1959. The average life span of Great Lakes Caspian Terns is estimated to be 12 years.

source - Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

 

پرستو دریایی خزری

caspian tern with greater crested tern and little crested tern

About 7:00 a.m. with a little fog and three quarters across the lake. Had to take the shot for this is another first for me. There were two of them this morning at Peace Valley Park, New Britain Pa.

There was one calm adult Caspian Tern in the flock of Elegant Terns and Gulls. I hope it sticks around so I can get my golden light shot next week.

Wanted to add a flight shot to my Caspian series.

Bakau, Gambia. Light was always difficult at lunchtime.

(Hydroprogne caspia)

With begging juvenile

Port Aransas, Texas

I had an awesome time photographing these two Caspian Terns on the beach in Mexico. The bird on the right was constantly pestering the bird on the left, following it around everywhere giving a high-pitched call. I'd suspect it was a young bird that was begging for food.

 

Taken in Neuvo Vallarta, Nayarit, Mexico - December 2016.

Summer of 2008 - 1387

 

North of Iran

Taken during a fly by.

It was quite fun to watch male bird displaying with bowing movements of the head and offerings of fish to attract a female mate.

Caspian Tern in flight at Anahuac National Wildlife Refuge, Texas, USA.

Press "L".

 

Pentax 67ii, SMC 45mm f4, Lee GND 0.6 HE, Heliopan SH-PMC CPL, Fujifilm Provia 100F (RDPIII), self-developed in Fuji Hunt Chrome 6X, IT8-calibrated & wet-mounted drumscan.

 

...::: 4nalog :::...

Bolivar Shorebird Sanctuary, Galveston County, Texas

Caspian tern

 

DJH07227-Edit

Attenborough NR, Nottinghamshire. Showed well from Kingfisher hide most of the afternoon.

There were lots of Caspian Terns around but they were not fishing/diving so I either got resting shots or traveling shots.

Caspian Tern at beach near where I stayed near Sanibel Island, Florida.

fishing at the harbor

We've had rain; the lake is stocked with fish; dragonflies have made their appearance, and yet we have no herons or egrets inland so far this year. (One of the fish we spotted this morning was at least a 2 pounder.) Then, we spotted our casual pond visitor, a Caspian Tern.

 

He made seven or eight passes over the lake, never hovering, never diving. It's rare that we have a tern this far inland, but it's obvious that they know where the fishing has been good. I don't know if this long shot was worth posting, but I have so few in-flight images...

A pair of our largest tern at San Carlos, Sonora, Mexico.

Caspian tern

 

DJH06987-Edit

Kotu Creek, Kombo North, The Gambia

Laridae (Sterna caspia)

Rockport Texas April 2010.

Sure hard to pick the ye out on these beautys

D

This juvenile Caspian Tern was still being fed by its parents for the most part but did occasionally take a stab at fishing for himself.

This juvenile Caspian Tern was still being fed by its parents for the most part but did occasionally take a stab at fishing for himself.

Raubsseeschwalbe - Hydroprogne caspia - Sterne caspienne

Another shaker shot 😊

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