View allAll Photos Tagged Minnows
The young Loons are big eaters. Here Dad races in to present a minnow to the chick. They do this ten to twenty times a day and the chicks grow very quickly.
At sunrise on Marco Island Florida this Snowy Egret was going about his own business catching minnows and flipping them like popcorn. What a routine.
View full screen. L then F11
A Green heron enjoying minnows, one after the other.
Wildwood Lake, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Thank you for the visit!
A Great Heron with a minnow in the mangrove marsh. When the water gets shallow, the wading birds in the Ten Thousand Islands get all of the small fish they can eat.
Green heron, Wildwood Lake, Harrisburg, Pennsylvania.
Thanks so much for the clicks!
1/1000 sec. f/11 600mm ISO1600
Great Blue Heron with fathead minnow, Suamico, Wisconsin USA
cropped in from full frame just a tad for comp
Group Cover \o/
Group Location: www.flickr.com/groups/4065974@N23/
Original Pix: www.flickr.com/photos/57752611@N04/40530849203/in/datepos...
I’ve spotted a few Least Bitterns, but they haven’t given me a shot. This one was busy hunting and staying in the open until it got its minnow, after which it promptly disappeared back into the reeds. They are a favorite target in large part because of the challenge they present. They are pretty too! (Ixobrychus exilis) (Sony a1ii, 400mm lens, f/2.8, 1/1600 second, ISO 1000)
Everybody loves a buffet.
This Mink has been visiting the small open ditch north of Mud Lake to feed on the thousands of minnows that call the water home. It has found a couple of places to shelter, and then either visits the edge of the water or slips under the partial ice, emerging with fish each time.
Given the fact that the small area of open water is literally full of minnows- someone told me a friend had identified them as Flatheads - it is more like visiting a smorgasbord than hunting. I could reach into the water with a bare hand and pull out a dozen, I am sure.
This is the area that the Robins and perhaps the Hermit Thrush have used for their protein source. Watching the birds fishing is pretty neat, but the Mink knows what it is doing, and is an efficient mustelid hunting machine.
Sadly work has once again taken over, and I have been in Montreal enduring long days. That has prevented me from trying to secure an image in decent light. The overcast skies and snowy setting are a challenge with the Mink.
Observed this very unusual and interesting behaviour!
There were thousands and thousands of minnows in a small opening in the stream.
See description by Peter Simpson:
www.flickr.com/photos/peterasimpson/51868346555/in/datepo...
Mud Lake, Ottawa.
They are so fast swallowing the minnow that if it wasn't for the kelp this shot wouldn't have been clicked.
Continuing to wander aimlessly through my thousands of photos. This shot was taken 14 years ago along the shore of Lake McDonald in Glacier National Park. Just some minnows swimming around in the shallow water among multi-colored rocks.
A Great Egret hunting while we were on a walk last weekend. He was very skilled at grabbing these minnows one after another and rarely missed a strike.
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