View allAll Photos Tagged RedNeckedPhalarope
Red-Necked Phalarope © Steve Frye. Photo taken on the Boulder Flying Circus Birders Walk on May 11, 2019.
This Red-Necked Phalarope, an uncommon visitor to Ottawa, was a life list addition to my photo collection.
Photographed Saturday morning with my new Canon 500mm F4 IS L.
I'm loving this lens already!!!!
Red-necked phalarope feeding on invertebrates pushed to the surface by the strong tidal currents of this region.
They are now changing over to winter clothes and heading for the Sargasso sea . They gather in large numbers in august in specific ponds for socialising and feeding before the big trip south .
First record for Livingston Parish, and one of few recent records for Louisiana, and perhaps only the second inland record. Found by Van Remsen.
Honum brá svolítið greyinu þegar ég tók mynd af honum rétt áður en þessi var tekin og þess vegna varð svona skemmtileg hreyfing á honum
Red-Necked Phalaropes © Steve Frye. Photo taken on the Boulder Flying Circus Birders Walk on September 28, 2019.
off Lopez Island
collections of sets, e.g. mountains by range, lichens by genus www.flickr.com/photos/29750062@N06/collections/
Red-necked Phalarope photographed offshore of Puerto Penasco, Mexico during a whale watching trip (Eco Fun Rentals) on 10 January 2015.
First record for Livingston Parish, and one of few recent records for Louisiana, and perhaps only the second inland record. Found by Van Remsen.
Female Red-necked Phalarope/Northern Phalarope (Phalaropus lobatus) newly arrived on Fetlar in the Shetland Islands - They are really confiding, as you can see.
Diagnostic Red-necked Phalarope, Phaloropus lobatus, spotted by trip participant Ken Lowder (Iowa, USA) and a RARE vagrant to Madagascar.
Enroute from Tulear to Ifaty, Madagascar.
©bryanjsmith.
First record for Livingston Parish, and one of few recent records for Louisiana, and perhaps only the second inland record. Found by Van Remsen.
Red-necked Phalarope, record shot, taken through a spotting scope with an iPhone 4, Rutland Water, June 2013.
The smoke and haze of several wildfires has created this heavy filtered effect on the horizon and degraded air quality in the region. Looking forward to a change in the weather; it's been a very hot, dry summer of dangerous fire conditions.
DSC_0294
This confiding juvenile performed well in a borrow dyke at East Mersea, near Colchester, Essex, United Kingdom for several days. It arrived after a period of North to North-westerly gales. This species is recorded annually in Essex in very small numbers.
First record for Livingston Parish, and one of few recent records for Louisiana, and perhaps only the second inland record. Found by Van Remsen.
Dw00182 Red-necked phalarope, phalaropus lobatus, Odinshane
Bird watercolor illustration handmade by Frits Ahlefeldt
My website: FritsAhlefeldt
Direkt link Download larger and commercial use versions:
fritsahlefeldt.net/collections/download-watercolor-birds/...