View allAll Photos Tagged DART

Treharris March 2016 ex stagecoach London.

Female common darter dragonfly. Natural light. Focus stacked using zerene

Seen in the depot is JMB Travel of Newmains Plaxton Pointer 2 bodied Dennis Dart SLF Y189CFS. New to Lothian Buses.

Pictured in Whitehaven is this Stagecoach Cumbria & North Lancashire Alexander Dennis Dart SLF 10.7M with Alexander Dennis Pointer 2 bodywork. It is registered PX56 CWO with the fleet number of 35248 and is captured working the 32 service to Egremont.

only shot of a very active little character.. about 1cm long

A few of the darters we netted while waiting for fish to bite. Grundy County, IL. April 17, 2016.

DART 5 is a 1979 Dodge W40 ex-military ambulance. It is used mainly for public relations at community events, although it also serves as a backup tow vehicle for the boat.

 

dartsac.org

10th April 2018, Balmoral Beach, NSW, Australia

 

Panasonic LUMIX GX8 & Leica LUMIX 100-400mm lens

 

Bob Thompson

A Dodge Dart Custom at the Big Bumper Meet in Oldenburg.

  

© Dennis Matthies

My photographs are copyrighted and may not be altered, printed, published in any media and/or format, or re-posted in other websites/blogs.

Dodge Dart

 

© All rights reserved.

Dart 23 hasn't benefitted from the new E200 engines being fitted to the older SLFs, and instead is finished to the same style as sister bus 15. Except for having black doors.

Publicité Dart.

 

Dart Ad.

Preserved Yellow Buses Bournemouth Dennis Dart M455 LLJ out this morning.

Typically smart tourist ferry on the Dart

 

Male common darter dragonfly. Focus stacked using zerene

Hello Stranger ! Dennis Dart WA03WWZ, Stagecoach Fleet 34399, has been working the 77 service in Newton Abbot today. Seen in Queensway with the 1350 service from town. 7th March 2015

El Dorado Novabus RTS bus of Dallas Area Rapid Transit; Dallas, Texas.

Yellow-winged darter

Thank you very much for the visits, faves and comments. Cheers.

 

Australasian Darter

Anhinga novaehollandiae

Anhingidae

Description: The Darter is a large, slim water bird with a long snake-like neck, sharp pointed bill, and long, rounded tail. Male birds are dark brownish black with glossy black upperwings, streaked and spotted white, silver-grey and brown. The strongly kinked neck has a white or pale brown stripe from the bill to where the neck kinks and the breast is chestnut brown. Females and immatures are grey-brown above, pale grey to white below, with a white neck stripe that is less distinct in young birds. The Darter is often seen swimming with only the snake-like neck visible above the water, or drying its wings while perched on a tree or stump over water. While its gait is clumsy on land, it can soar gracefully to great heights on thermals, gliding from updraft to updraft. It has a cross-shaped silhouette when flying.

Distribution: In Australia, the Darter is found from Adelaide, South Australia, to Tennant Creek, Northern Territory and then to Broome, Western Australia. it is also found in south-western Australia, from Perth to Esperance. Worldwide, it has been thought of as one of two mainAnhinga species (the other, A. anhinga, is found in North America), found in the southern half of Africa, Madagascar, Iraq, Pakistan, India, south-east Asia, Indonesia and New Guinea. However, A. melanogaster is now considered to be further divided into three species, with rufa being found in Africa, melanogaster in south Asia and novaehollandiae in New Guinea and Australia (the Australasian Darter).

Habitat: The Darter is found in wetlands and sheltered coastal waters, mainly in the Tropics and Subtropics. It prefers smooth, open waters, for feeding, with tree trunks, branches, stumps or posts fringing the water, for resting and drying its wings. Most often seen inland, around permanent and temporary water bodies at least half a metre deep, but may be seen in calm seas near shore, fishing. The Darter is not affected by salinity or murky waters, but does require waters with sparse vegetation that allow it to swim and dive easily. It builds its nests in trees standing in water, and will move to deeper waters if the waters begin to dry up.

Feeding: The Darter catches fish with its sharp bill partly open while diving in water deeper than 60 cm. The fish is pierced from underneath, flicked onto the water's surface and then swallowed head first. Smaller items are eaten underwater and large items may be carried to a convenient perch and then swallowed. Insects and other aquatic animals, including tortoises, may also be eaten, as well as some vegetable matter. In hot weather, adult birds may pour water from their bills into the gullets of their young chicks when they are still in the nest.

Breeding: The Darter is usually a solitary bird, forming pairs only while breeding. Breeding is erratic, happening whenever water levels and food supplies are suitable, but most often occurs in spring and summer. Nests are usually solitary, but Darters may nest within loose colonies with other water birds that nest in trees, such as cormorants, spoonbills and ibis. The male decorates a nest-site with green leafy twigs and displays to attract a mate, with elaborate wing-waving and twig-grasping movements. The male carries most of the nest material to the nest-site, which is normally in the fork of a tree standing in water, usually about 3.5 m above the water's surface. Both sexes complete the nest, incubate the eggs and raise the young. Chicks are kept warm by brooding continously (or cooled down by shading with spread wings) for up to a week after hatching and both adults stay in the nest with the chicks overnight. In hot weather, the adults will even shake water over the chicks after a swim. Chicks can swim after about four weeks in the nest and start to fly at about 50 days.

(Source: www.birdlife.org.au)

  

© Chris Burns 2014

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This image may not be copied, reproduced, distributed, republished, downloaded, displayed, posted or transmitted in any form or by any means, including electronic, mechanical, photocopying and recording without my written consent.

Darter dragonflies mating on a hydrangea. Focus stacked using zerene

DART 3 is one of two former Sacramento Metro Fire medic units operated by the Drowning Accident Rescue Team (DART). Both units are equipped so that divers can suit-up en route to an incident.

RTS bus of the Dallas Area Rapid Transit northbound on Harry Hines Blvd.

DART CNG 2012 NABI LFW Gen III.

Spotted today in Watts Meadow. As far as I can see, she has black legs, so I think that makes her a female ruddy darter.

New 2015 CNG NABI LFW-53.

Abellio Surrey Dennis Dart SLF

8002 LJ56ONK

Classic mini Mopar muscle.

Upper Vartry Lake, Lillies floating beyond. Distinguished from Common Darter by its waisted abdomen

Recently produced mural on the wall of the South West Water pumping house in Totnes, beside the River Dart.

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