View allAll Photos Tagged behaviour
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.
Album Title: Exotic Behaviour
Model: 虹羚
Photographer: Edwin Setiawan
Place: 士林官邸
Date: 2009/07/12
Just about Photography: edwinsetiawan.wordpress.com
Edwin Setiawan Photography: www.edwinsetiawan.com
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.
I'm assuming this is a breeding/aggression display by a red-breasted merganser.
There were a number of males chasing each other.
The bird on the left lifted its tail, lowered its stomach and lifted its head.
This was followed by the merganser stretching his neck as long and tall as it could.
I haven't seen this behaviour before and it was interesting to watch.
Mergus serrator
source - Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.
In the spirit of a fair degree of risk aversion on my part, I have a few examples where hanging in for a few more seconds would have been a bad thing. These three herd bulls - African Elephant, Canadian Elk and Cape Buffalo, all showing characteristic threat signs directed at an intruder (my wife and I in these cases): ie eye contact, looking at us square on but turning the body so we can see how big they are, and positioning the head so we can see the horns. Specifically, the African Elephant will flare its ears and swing its trunk side-to-side - as ours did, the Elk stereotypically gestured at me and snorted, and the Cape Buffalo bristled the hair at the top of his neck, stared at us, and snorted. In all three cases we took the hint and left immediately (after the picture was taken!). Note that these are all prey animals - predators defending their young may have had a different approach.
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.
Seoul 26th International Conference on “Medical, Medicine and Health Sciences” (MMHS- 2017 Seoul)
October 03-04, 2017 Seoul, Korea
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.
Don't come birdwatching with me if you expect a checklist, tallies or exclamations of "lifer". This isn't stamp collecting or trainspotting. You might even find that I'm so engrossed with seeing what the bird is doing that I forget that big heavy thing is a camera.
See that dark blob. That's most likely a bundle of bark and spiderwebs. Scale? You can probably cup it one hand.
Earlier, before the heat got up, the bush was alive with LBBs ( little brown birds ), and birdsong — big and small. The calls of noisy friarbirds and grey shrike-thrushes went on; the little ones just stopped. So out here, the expectations of seeing anything at all was not high.
Here's the thing. Not everyone can clock off just because it's hot. That's what's going on here. The quick flit, the blur of a little bird was really only resolved by that stationary dark blob. What's notable is that the blob actually looked different from time to time. It was sinking in…two birds, dimorphic plumage, one species. Nesting behaviour!!
I don't make lists, so this isn't a list entry. One female leaden flycatcher, one male leaden flycatcher, both doing food drops by the short duration at the nest. Up there, right now is a nest, and in that nest is an unknown number of little mouths!!! Assume nothing. According to my sources, the leaden flycatcher is parasitised by a variety of cuckoos. They might be feeding someone else's baby.
Sorry, no photos of the "parents". Privacy, you know, or oversight…
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.
Gesture, attitude, behaviour : a workshop with dancers Mauro Paccagnella and Alessandro Bernardeschi on march 6, 2007 at Erg (Ecole de Recherche Graphique, Brussels) for bachelor 1 students. Professors : Sabine Voglaire and Marc Wathieu. Pictures by Yves André.