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Another bird image from yesterday.
This Red-Browed Finch perched nicely on top of the branch giving a nice comp and uncluttered background - hope you like it!!
Have a fantastic day and week!!
Thank you for any comments, views or favorites for this or any of my other images - greatly appreciated!!!
*** Best viewed Large on Black!! ***
All Rights Reserve / tikozook@gmail.com / Original Digital Capture from a real life scene
Mide 34 cm. y pesa 65 grs. Es relativamente pequeño, con un patrón muy llamativo. La cola presenta raquetas grandes al final del raquis desnudo y largo.
Los adultos presentan una máscara angosta negra que se extiende hasta los auriculares, la ceja larga y la lista angosta por debajo de la parte anterior de la máscara de color turquesa claro. El centro de la garganta es negro con un lista turquesa a los lados. El centro de la espalda y la zona possterior del área detrás del ojo es de color rufo. El abdomen es rufo canela pálido y el resto de la cabeza, el cuello y el cuerpo es verde oliváceo, con la coronilla más oscura. Las remeras y las timoneras e incluso las raquetas son verde azulado claro con la punta negra conspicua. El pico y las patas son negras.
Los ejemplares juveniles presentan la coronilla verde azulado fusco con las puntas de las plumas más claras. La ceja es turquesa, muy corta y angosta. El verde del cuerpo es más azulado y menos oliváceo. Presenta muy poco o nada de rufo en la espalda y no presenta negro y turquesa en la garganta. El abdomen es más claro y opaco, y las timoneras, incluso las raquetas, son más angostas y opacas.
White Browed Bulbul (Pycnonotus luteolus) . Sub species insulae is an endemic resident of Sri Lanka. An adult. Belongs to Pycnonotidae family. Clicked at Baddegana Wetland Park, Sri Lanka.
A lot has changed since this Picture was taken forty ish years ago, tree growth has increased and changed the view, the loco is in the NRM in a different form and the lineside telegraph poles and wires are no more
hello everyone, i really had a hard time finding eyebrows that i liked completely on my genus' face, so i took matters into my own hands and created my own!
The black-browed barbet is an Asian barbet native to Peninsular Malaysia and Sumatra, where it inhabits foremost forests between 600 and 2,000 m altitude. It is listed as Least Concern on the IUCN Red List because of its wide distribution and stable population.
Scientific name: Megalaima oorti
I heard this charming little bird before I saw it. My imitation of it's mellow, musical call allowed me to approach it and get a clear shot. The second pic. shows it singing back at me and lifting the feathers on it's pretty little head. Like the other three Australian Pardalote species it builds a nest in the end of a tunnel in a bank and lines it with grass and bark.
The peppershikes are included with the vireos, even though these rather large, heavy-set and thick-billed birds do not much resemble their generally smaller relatives. The Rufous-browed Peppershrike is very widely distributed from Mexico down to Argentina and has adapted to a range of habitats in addition to forests including coffee plantations and gardens. They feed on invertebrates, particularly beetles and spiders (this one caught a large spider shortly after this photo was taken). Like most vireos, peppershrikes have learnt to recognize the eggs of the parasitic cowbird which they quickly eject from the nest.
Sericornis frontalis
They never look happy when you walk past their territory on bush trails. Must be those eyes!
This one is actually just calling
Name: Rufous-browed flycatcher
Scientific: Anthipes solitaris
Malay: Sambar Kening-perang
Family: Muscicapidae
IUCN Red List (v3.1, 2016): Least Concern
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Penelope jacucaca
Another key target in this area was the endemic and rare White-browed Guan. To see them as well as this was a treat....
White Browed Prinia (Priniainornata). Sub species insularis is an endemic resident of Sri Lanka. An adult. Belongs to Cisticolidae family. Clicked at Panama, Sri Lanka.
The Yellow-browed Warbler is an enigma. It breeds in Siberia east of the Urals and winters in Malaysia and Thailand. Yet it occurs with great regularity in Britain, usually in autumn. To arrive in Britain would involve a journey of at least 4000 km, but flying in totally the wrong direction to its wintering grounds. More than 300 Yellow-browed Warblers occur in Britain annually, mostly in autumn but a small number also overwinter, and successfully too. This is one such overwintering individual photographed this week near Barnsley in South Yorkshire. With so many birds occurring so regularly it might be that a new migration pattern is developing, with some birds wintering in Africa (at least one has occurred in Senegal in December).
Its scientific name, Phylloscopus inornatus, is also a bit of a puzzle. Phylloscopus means leaf-gleaner and it is the same genus as Chiffchaff, Willow Warbler and Wood Warbler. But inornatus means undecorated or inornate, yet it has more stripes and bars than its undecorated cousins. That is because when Edward Blyth first described it new to science back in 1842, he thought it was a type of Goldcrest but lacking the golden crown. So Blyth named it Regulus inornatus, the undecorated Goldcrest or Kinglet.