View allAll Photos Tagged COMMONALITIES
A Common Redpoll (Carduelis flammea) in the aspen woods east of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
24 February, 2013.
Slide # GWB_20130224_2427.CR2
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© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
I liked this one of the gallinules and did a photoshop treatment of mainly the water. I tried to maintain the integrity of the original and add something to spice up one of the most common species in my area.
One of the best days birding we had. So many different shore birds in one small area. The chicks were no more then a day or two old. They were so cute from afar. The wings look like little sticks popping out. It was very tough getting both birds in focus. The chicks were so small.
Bombay Hook Wildlife Refuge, DE
A Common Goldeneye (Bucephala clangula) male going through its spring display in the hopes of attracting a mate on an urban pond in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
19 April, 2016.
Slide # GWB_20160419_8869.CR2
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© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
A Common Grackle (Quiscalus quiscula) roosting on the old cattail stalk in a marsh west of St. Albert., Alberta, Canada.
9 May, 2023.
Slide # GWB_20230509_3947.CR2
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© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
Common Tern - Sterna Hirundo
It is strongly migratory, wintering in coastal tropical and subtropical regions. Breeding adults have light grey upperparts, white to very light grey underparts, a black cap, orange-red legs, and a narrow pointed bill. Depending on the subspecies, the bill may be mostly red with a black tip or all black. There are a number of similar species, including the partly sympatric Arctic tern, which can be separated on plumage details, leg and bill colour, or vocalisations.
Breeding in a wider range of habitats than any of its relatives, the common tern nests on any flat, poorly vegetated surface close to water, including beaches and islands, and it readily adapts to artificial substrates such as floating rafts. The nest may be a bare scrape in sand or gravel, but it is often lined or edged with whatever debris is available. Up to three eggs may be laid, their dull colours and blotchy patterns providing camouflage on the open beach.
Population:
UK breeding:
12,000 pairs
One of the pair of bridled common murres show here has just arrived back on a ledge of the nesting cliff, so a little vocalizing, mutual pecking, and wing flapping was in order.
Picture taken at Pousada da Fazenda, Monte Alegre do Sul, São Paulo.
HMBT!
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The secretive Gray Catbird, with its distinctive cat-like
mewing note, is a common winter resident in Florida.
Many pass through the state during migration.
Gray Catbirds are one of the most common species that non-birders in their range are likely to have never seen nor identified. The catbird’s rather bland coloration – slate gray with a black cap and chestnut under the tail – doesn’t attract attention, and unlike their cousins, the mockingbirds, that often sing from exposed perches, catbirds prefer to sing their jumbled songs from cover. And it is the sounds that catbirds make that give them their name and makes it at all likely that their presence will be noted.
Gray Catbirds, to put it simply, have a call note that sounds like a cat with a scratchy and short meow. This sound emanating from a tangle of brush can easily fool those not in the know. The song of the Gray Catbird, however, is nothing like a cat meowing: like the mockingbird and thrasher the catbird often mimics other birds and sounds but it tends not to repeat itself. The rule of thumb is that if a phrase is repeated three times in a row it is a mockingbird, it it is repeated twice a thrasher is singing, and if each phrase of the song is sang just once one is dealing with a catbird.
I found this one in my backyard in Lake Wales, Polk County, Florida.
Another image from several years ago taken in Haliburton Ontario, finally getting around to organizing them.
06212012 1434
A Common Goldeneye (Bucephala clangula) drake in the company of a female, maybe courting it, on a small urban pond in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.
26 April, 2022.
Slide # GWB_20220426_1130.CR2
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© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
A Common Grackle (Quiscalus quiscula) perched in the old cattails from last year in a marsh on the edge of St. Albert, Alberta, Canada.
9 May, 2023.
Slide # GWB_20230509_3723.CR2
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© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
RKO_7767. What's up there!
Copyright: Robert Kok. All rights reserved! Watermark protected.
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This is a small kingfisher with seven subspecies recognized within its wide distribution. This 16 centimetres long bird has the typical short-tailed, large-headed kingfisher profile. Interestingly this bird has no song.
Common Redpoll (Carduelis flammea) male perched in the mixed woods of the boreal region north of Thorhild, Alberta, Canada.
21 February, 2013.
Slide # GWB_20130221_2117.CR2
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© Gerard W. Beyersbergen - All Rights Reserved Worldwide In Perpetuity - No Unauthorized Use.
Common redstart (Phoenicurus phoenicurus) male perched on a wooden fence.
Samiec pleszki (Phoenicurus phoenicurus) siedzący na drewnianym płotku.
Each winter, we get inundated with Common Redpolls. They will flock to our feeders and eat many many seeds. This example is a male, which is told by its bright red head and chest.
To stay warm on winter's nights, the Redpoll will burrow into the snow for warmth. They have throat pouches to store seeds at the source and fly back to a warmer place to eat. In places where there are no bird feeders, they survive on birch seeds, eating over 40% of their body weight each day.
The Redpoll is found mostly in the the northern climates and an estimated to be tens of millions of them world wide.
Playing with the light circumstance
Common Linnet (Kneu) [female]
Location: Texel, the Netherlands
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Wikipedia: The common iora (Aegithina tiphia) is a small passerine bird found across the tropical Indian subcontinent and Southeast Asia, with populations showing plumage variations, some of which are designated as subspecies. A species found in scrub and forest, it is easily detected from its loud whistles and the bright colors. During the breeding season, males display by fluffing up their feathers and spiral in the air appearing like a green, black, yellow, and white ball.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Common_iora
Conservation status: Least Concern