View allAll Photos Tagged buff

Seen on a tour with www.Birdingushuaia.com

 

from Wiki:

The buff-winged cinclodes is partly migratory. Much of the populations in Tierra del Fuego and Patagonia move north after the breeding season, as apparently do some from the year-round range. In the austral winter they are found in northern Argentina, southeastern Paraguay, much of Uruguay, and as far north in Brazil as Rio Grande do Sul and Santa Catarina states. Some also remain approximately at their breeding latitude but move to lower elevations.

 

The BWCI belongs to the family Ovenbirds or furnariids, a large family of small suboscine passerine birds found from Mexico and Central to southern South America. They form the family Furnariidae. This is a large family containing around 321 species and 71 genera. The ovenbird (Seiurus aurocapilla), which breeds in North America, is not a furnariid – rather it is a distantly related bird of the wood warbler family, Parulidae.

 

The ovenbirds are a diverse group of insectivores which get their name from the elaborate, vaguely "oven-like" clay nests built by the horneros, although most other ovenbirds build stick nests or nest in tunnels or clefts in rock.[1] The Spanish word for "oven" (horno) gives the horneros their name. Furnariid nests are always constructed with a cover, and up to six pale blue, greenish or white eggs are laid. The eggs hatch after 15 to 22 days, and the young fledge after a further 13 to 20 days.

 

Furnariidae:

Sclerurinae – miners and leaftosser (18 species)

 

Dendrocolaptinae – woodcreepers (60 species)

 

Furnariinae – "true" ovenbirds (243 species)

First attempt with a macro lens, caught this bumblebee leaving a foxglove.

Acanthizidae (Acanthiza reguloides)

Gathering nectar in my garden. Taken on a phone.

Hacienda El Bosque, Caldas, Colombia

From a few days ago on the shores of Lake Erie

I photographed this buff banded rail at Corroboree Billabong in the Northern Territory of Australia. They are usually a very shy bird that runs away when they see someone but this one was different and hung around long enough for me to get a few good photos.

A marvel of evolution and camouflage.

39 handheld images stacked in Zerene.

Buff-throated Saltator

Saltator maximus

Saltador de garganta canela

Familia (Family): Thraupidae

Taxonomía (Taxonomy): SACC

 

Lugar (Taken in): Barbosa, Antioquia, Colombia

© Wilmer Quiceno

 

Follow me on Instagram: @wilmer.quiceno

Spilarctia luteum

 

Photographed in my Kent garden.

alexperryphotography.blogspot.com

Buff-tailed bumblebee (Bombus terrestris) licking a cobblestone.

 

Trzmiel ziemny (Bombus terrestris) liżący kamień brukowy.

(Boissonneaua flavescens)

San Jorge Tandayapa, Ecuador

Many thanks for the visits, faves and comments. Cheers

 

Buff-banded Rail

Scientific Name: Gallirallus philippensis

Description: The Buff-banded Rail is a medium-sized stout rail with short legs. It has a distinctive grey eyebrow and an orange-brown band on its streaked breast. The lores, cheek and hindneck are rich chestnut. The chin and throat are grey, the upperparts streaked brown and the underparts barred black and white. The eye is red. Young birds are much paler to white underneath, with indistinct bars and only a faint orange-brown tint on the breast. Downy chicks are fluffy black. This rail walks slowly, with tail raised and flicking constantly.

Similar species: The orange-brown breast band distinguishes the Buff-banded Rail from the similar but smaller Lewin's Rail,Dryolimnas pectoralis, which has a rich chestnut crown and nape and a proportionally longer pink bill.

Distribution: The Buff-banded Rail is widespread in mainland Australia, particularly along the eastern coast and islands, and on Norfolk and Lord Howe Islands. It is also found in south-east Asia, New Guinea and New Zealand.

Habitat: The Buff-banded Rail is seen singly or in pairs in dense reeds and vegetation bordering many types of wetlands or crops. It makes widespread use of artificial wetlands like sewage ponds and drainage channels.

Seasonal movements: The Buff-banded Rail is resident and possibly locally nomadic, though little is known of these movements.

Feeding: The Buff-banded Rail feeds on crustaceans, molluscs, insects, seeds, fruit, frogs, carrion and refuse. It mostly feeds early in the morning and the evening.

Breeding: Breeding is poorly known, but the Buff-breasted Rail nests in long grass, tussocks, rushes or crops. It makes an unlined cup-shaped nest of grasses or reeds. Both parents incubate and the young will leave the nest within 24 hours. Both parents remain with the young, which usually feed themselves, though the female may feed them as well. Two broods may be raised in some seasons.

Calls: Loud creaky squeak when breeding but usually silent.

Minimum Size: 28cm

Maximum Size: 33cm

Average size: 31cm

Average weight: 130g

Breeding season: September to February

Clutch Size: 5 to 8 eggs

Incubation: 19 days

Nestling Period: 1 days

(source: www.birdsinbackyards.net)

 

© Chris Burns 2019

__________________________________________

 

All rights reserved.

This image may not be copied, reproduced, distributed, republished, downloaded, displayed, posted or transmitted in any form or by any means, including electronic, mechanical, photocopying and recording without my written consent.

Another shot of this busy hummingbird, photographed at Guango Lodge, Ecuador.

 

I've just closed my hurricane shutters - weird weather!!

Paul C Buff’s Einstein is an incredible studio strobe! irvingphotographydenver.com/paul-c-buff-lighting/

South Dakota Air and Space Museum

Buff-breasted Sandpiper Portland Dorset UK

Buff-rumped thornbill.

Good weather for trawling the archives at the moment.

This was taken last year on Callum Brae.

Australian Capital Territory, May 2014.

Fairly common in humid tropical lowlands. Favors forest edges, plantations, and dense second growth. Usually seen singly or in pairs, foraging quietly in flowering or fruiting trees. Buff throat patch is bordered by black moustache stripes. Birds from western Panama north also show black chest band around buff throat. Note less contrast between head and back than larger Black-headed Saltator, and longer white eyebrow of Green-winged Saltator.

Most of my Costa Rican birds have been photographed at Tico Rainforest B&B. Here, the owner, Victor has documented over 200 different species on his small 2 hectare property.

BUFF FULLPACK SET+HEELS

 

Jaquet + Jeans for bodyes:

Reborn / Waifu

Legacy

Classic Bombshell

Lara X

 

Boots:

Reborn

Legacy

Lara X

 

HUD COLORS IN FATPACK

 

Mainstore: maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Scandalize/117/170/19

 

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Buff-breasted Sandpiper ~ (Tryngites subruficollis)

 

What a treat to see my favorite shorebird at Fort DeSoto this week. Their subtle colors and delicate features make Buff-breasted Sandpipers so beautiful to me. A bird we only get to see as they migrate through from its arctic breeding grounds to southern South America.

 

Thanks for visiting!

Medium-sized hummingbird, mostly dark green with obvious buffy underwing and mostly buffy tail. Fairly short, straight bill. Sexes similar. Found in cloud forest from Venezuela to Ecuador, mostly from 1,500–2,400 m. Usually forages in middle to upper levels of trees. Visits feeders, where it aggressively defends its territory against other hummingbirds.

 

This one was photographed in Ecuador guided by Neotropic Photo Tours.

Boodjamulla (Lawn Hill) National Park, QLD

Another one from the archives.

Thanks for your views, faves and comments.

We had a great time birding in Colombia with a great guide, Andrea Beltran.

Lovely fall colours atop the rocky ground of 'the Bruce'

Name: Buff-rumped woodpecker (female)

Scientific: Meiglyptes grammithorax

Malay: Belatuk Batu Biasa / Belatuk Pinggul Kuning

Family: Picidae

IUCN Red List (v3.1, 2016): Least Concern

Gear: SONY a1 + SEL200600G + SEL14TC.

 

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Copyright © 2021 Nur Ismail Photography. All rights reserved. Do not use or reproduce these images on websites, blogs or publications without expressed written permission from the photographer.

 

For any enquiries, please visit my website: www.nurismailphotography.com or email at nismailm@gmail.com.

 

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Iona Island, Vancouver, BC

 

Lifer!

Buff - tailed bumblebee pollinating my amistad salvia.

a first today at minsmere would have liked it a bit closer but we are never satisfied

Buff tailed bumblebee sheltering from a brief shower.

Fairly common in humid tropical lowlands. Favours forest edges, plantations, and dense second growth. Usually seen singly or in pairs, foraging quietly in flowering or fruiting trees. Buff throat patch is bordered by black moustache stripes. Birds from western Panama north also show black chest band around buff throat. Note less contrast between head and back than larger Black-headed Saltator, and longer white eyebrow of Green-winged Saltator.

Tico Rainforest B&B, Horquetas de Sarapiqui, Costa Rica.

Boissonneaua flavescens

(Buff-tailed Coronet / Colibrí colihabano)

 

These medium-sized hummingbirds display a cinnamon underwing in flight, and other than the bronzy central tail feathers, the tail is notably buffy. Buff-tailed Coronets inhabit humid and wet montane forests, shrubby forest borders, and dwarf forests. It is found in Colombia, Ecuador, and Venezuela.

 

They are rather defensive around mid and upper level flowers in the forest, and sometimes congregate with other hummingbirds at trees in the canopy interior. They hold on to flowers when feeding and hold their wings up in a V while doing so.

 

Photo taken at Reserva Natural Río Blanco. Here travelers can walk by ecological trails. It has an area of ​​4,932 hectares of cloud forest and is between 2,150 meters and 3,700 meters above sea level.

 

neotropical.birds.cornell.edu/Species-Account/nb/species/...

 

www.colombia.travel/es/a-donde-ir/andina/manisalreseu/act...

This hummingbird was photographed in Ecuador.

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