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Image taken in the Masai Mara National Reserve, Kenya.
Many thanks to everyone that views and comments on my images - very much appreciated.
Albatros de Ceja Negra, Black-browed Albatross, Thalassarche melanophris.
IUCN: Near Threatened (NT)
Lengua de Vaca
Región de Coquimbo
Chile
One of Mexico's most beautiful birds is the motmot and I was so pleased to see quite a few of these birds on this trip. In one day I saw 20 at one location. Needless to say I took a lot of photos.
White-browed wagtail sitting on the roof of my apartment.
A yellow silver blue color bus can be seen in the distant background on the elevated expressway .
Zoom in for a closer look at this bird.
The white-browed wagtail or large pied wagtail (Motacilla maderas patensis) is a medium-sized bird and is the largest member of the wagtail family.
They are conspicuously patterned with black above and white below, a prominent white brow, shoulder stripe and outer tail feathers. They are common in small water bodies and have adapted to urban environments where they often nest on roof tops. The specific name is derived from the Indian city of Madras (now Chennai).
A nomadic species that is fairly common through inland Australia.
Nombinnie Nature Reserve, NSW, Australia.
No I haven't been to the south Atlantic - this was taken off Bempton Cliffs on a boat trip (Yorkshire Coast Nature) in the summer. It was certainly a matter of right place, right time. Amazing to view the bird up close as we had seen it perched on the cliffs from a great distance.
Albie is "thought to be the only albatross of its kind in the Northern Hemisphere...
This magnificent long-distance traveller from the south Atlantic, with a wingspan of over 2.4m, has been living in the Baltic Seas around Denmark and Germany since 2014 after being blown off course from the South Atlantic oceans. It has remained in the Baltic area ever since, making occasional forays across the North Sea to RSPB Bempton Cliffs, near Flamborough, East Yorkshire, where it was first spotted in the summer of 2017." RSPB
A bird of the Southern Ocean, this Black-browed Albatross has returned to the North Sea for a few years.Although very welcome by the thousands of birders that visit RSPB Bempton Cliffs it is not welcomed by the local Gannet population.
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*Winner for Sie Yen brows Down below*
Hey girlies , today I'm dropping my natural brushy brows . She comes in 5 different tones to match different skin tones . Also you can use the tinting option on the genus or catwa hud to adjust the shade/colour .
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Pula-pula-assobiador (Myiothlypis leucoblephara).
(Vieillot, 1817).
Visit: www.birdier.com, and post your birds images there!!!!
it's a fine site, where you can organize your photos in different ways.
Visit my gallery at: www.birdier.com/user/bertrando-campos
Red-browed Finch, Neochmia temporalis
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This little cutie landed on the branch in front of me, and was framed between the old branches.
I thought, "Why Not"
Lifer! Conozcan al ave nacional de El Salvador y Nicaragua!
El momoto cejiazul (Eumomota superciliosa) es una especie de ave coraciforme de la familia Momotidae. Habita en Centroamérica desde la península de Yucatán hasta Panamá. Esta ave es también observada en América del Sur. En Colombia se le conoce como Barranquero. Es común y no se considera amenazado de extinción. Un rasgo muy llamativo y característico es que de su cola sobresalen dos largas plumas con el raquis desnudo y largo y pluma ancha al final, simulando dos raquetas grandes, como las de muchos otros momotos, pero los astiles son más largos. Muchas veces, sobre todo cuando están alarmados, mueve su cola como un péndulo de un lado a otro, de allí su apodo yucateco "pájaro reloj". Es comúnmente conocido en Yucatán como pájaro tho.
The turquoise-browed motmot also known as Torogoz, is a colourful, medium-sized bird of the motmot family, Momotidae. It inhabits Central America from south-east Mexico, to Costa Rica, where it is common and not considered threatened. It lives in fairly open habitats such as forest edge, gallery forest and scrubland.
Well I finally caved in and went across to Bempton Cliffs to see the Albatross, more than a month after it first showed up. I saw my only previous British Black-browed Albatross on Shetland in 1985 though I have seen thousands around the Falklands and South Georgia. I suppose the reason I waited so long to go for this one is because its appearances were unpredictable and erratic. Some days it would show stupendously well for a few minutes, but sometimes it would go missing for several days. But usually if it was present in the evening it would be present the following morning, having roosted on the cliff, but sometimes it would fly off at dawn and disappear for the day. It was present yesterday evening so I drove through the night to be there for 5am. The Albatross was duly sat on the cliff at dawn, but only viewable at distance. At 6am it flew down and landed on the sea, again at great distance. Having made the effort to drive over I decided to stick it out to see if it returned to the cliffs. At 11am, after a wait of six hours it finally decided to fly and then showed stupendously well for about 15 minutes in full sunshine, after which it landed on the cliff again and was only viewable at distance, where it sat for at least the next four hours, though I had gone soon after its performance. As a bonus I saw a Minke Whale and several Porpoises as I waited, along with all the usual Bempton seabirds.
Wikipedia: The rufous-browed flycatcher (Anthipes solitaris) is a species of bird in the family Muscicapidae. It is native to Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Thailand and Vietnam. Its natural habitat is subtropical or tropical moist montane forests.
Conservation status: Least Concern
Off the coast of South Georgia Island, this Black-browed Albatross flew with its wing skimming across the Southern Ocean.
At sea towards South Georgia
So efficient in the air that their in-flight heart rate barely rises above resting.
Black-browed Barbet, Megalaima oorti, Takur Kening Hitam
Another species that is common in sub-montane elevation. Usually stay high up in the trees but sometimes when there is lower fruiting trees, this bird comes down in numbers. Very difficult to spot in the foliage especially when it is not moving.
Antara Takur yang boleh dijumpai di kawasan peranginan tanah tinggi terutama di pokok pokok hutan yang sedang berbuah. Warnanya yang hijau menyebabkan ia agak sukar dikesan, terutama apabila ia tidak bergerak. Namun, apabila ada kumpulan burung lain sedang makan di pokok berbuah, selalunya spesis yang ini ada bersama.
Exif: f7.1, 1/200, ISO 500, focal length 800mm, Cik Canon EOS 50D, lens Canon 400mm, TC 2.0, tripod