View allAll Photos Tagged morph
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA Krider's is a pale morph of the eastern borealis subspecies of the Red-tailed Hawk.
Created for Digitalmania Group - Sherry Parker
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Inspired by Sherry Parker
Cinnamon/Brown colored Red Fox (Vulpes vulpes) kit trying to sneak up on his mother, in evening light. He has greenish yellow eyes, and his fur is totally one color except for the white on the tip of his tail and on a small blaze on his chest. Typically, Red Foxes have black legs and black on the backs and edges of their ears, as well as some white on their faces and tails. This little guy was the boldest kit in his litter.
My friend Max and I went to Jasper last week. This is one of my favourite photos from the journey.
As I inch ever closer to 100,000 images as of March 2015... This is the epitome of what started my journey into photography as I know it now.
Generally screwing around and trying to make something of my day. I don't like to take myself too seriously. I have a lot more fun (Max too) just generally screwing around haha.
His exact words to me were... "Dude... I wore a morph suit all day in two National Parks... How many people can say the same?"... Good question... Probably no one haha.
The colors on this house finch are an interesting blend of both red and yellow, not something I've seen before.
Reddish Egrets (Egretta rufescens) have two variations, the more common dark (reddish) morph and the less common white morph. With only 2000 breeding pairs of Reddish Egrets in the US, this is an uncommon sighting. Bolivar Flats, Bolivar Peninsula, Texas.
The brown morph plumage is the least common phenotype of the red-footed booby in the Hawaiian Islands. They are more common in the eastern tropical Pacific. To me they are an unusual and attractive bird! ‘Ā, red-footed booby, Sula sula.
Of course it's not Morph, see:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Morph_(TV_series)
It's the Beacon Of Hope in Glasgow Central station:
This Eastern Screech Owl lives in a bush outside someone’s home who was kind enough to us onto their property to photograph it. Thanks to my friend Mike for inviting me along. I was curious as to the percentage of red morphs, like this one, to the other phase which is gray. I read that there is also a brown variety, which might be a mix of a red and a grey or a variation of its own. About one third of the Screeches are red morphs but the distribution isn’t uniform. I read that in Tennessee and Illinois, about 78% are red. There are more red south than north and only about 15% are red toward the west edge of the territory which ends in the middle of the country. I like the red ones! (Megascops asio) (Sony a1, 400mm, f/2.8, 1/400 second, ISO 640)
For some reason I couldn't log into secondlife so, I thought I would try expanding my photoshop knowledge. Had fun learning something new. Hope you all like it.
I was shooting through branches in low light, but still delighted to see this snoozy red morph screech owl a few weeks ago. We stayed until the little murder muffin began trilling, then eventually flew off to hunt for the night.
One of the three ferruginous hawks alluded to in the previous post was a dark morph individual, seen here intently checking out something on the ground (a hiker's dog I think).
Dark morph ferruginous hawks are more rare than light morph individuals, though I couldn't find any (reliable) info on how rare dark morphs are. Herein lies a good example of why one should be leery of AI info from the web. Google's AI Overview declared dark morphs are 10% of the "population." Digging deeper to find the source of this info lead to a single item on a photographer's website that lacked attribution, and didn't define what the population being considered was. Additional digging found another source on a birders' chat site (also lacking a reference) that indicated 5% of the US population was dark morph and 10% of the Canadian population was dark morph. My guess is the info is out there somewhere, but Google AI had not found it, and relied on a single unreferenced source to broadcast.
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Despite its different last name, the Little Blue Heron is probably a close relative of the Snowy Egret. It looks much like a Snowy when it is young, but molts to a dark slate-blue plumage as an adult. Generally wary and hard to approach. Nests in colonies, sometimes of this species alone; in large mixed heronries, Little Blues tend to nest along the edges. Some of its largest colonies are in the lower Mississippi Valley, where it often nests in association with Cattle Egrets.
Source: Audubon