View allAll Photos Tagged nominated

Nominate subspecies ocellatus.

 

Tambopata Research Center [240m], Madre de Dios, Peru

Jasmine nominates in the diary room

IMAGE PROVIDED BY CHANNEL 5

Nominate subspecies alba

 

La Robellada, Peruyes, Asturias, Spain

Nominate subspecies albicilla

 

Loch Na Keal, Isle of Mull, Argyll & Bute, Scotland, UK

Nominate subspecies carbo

 

Swanpool, Falmouth, Cornwall, UK

Nominate subspecies chunchotambo.

 

Cordillera Escalera [985m], Tarapoto, San Martin, Peru

nominated for champion tree

south lawn of St. Teresa's Academy

KCMO

Nominate subspecies fasciatus.

 

Limon de Porculla [1800m], Abra Porculla, Piura, Peru

Nominate subspecies inda.

 

Tambopata Research Center [240m], Madre de Dios, Peru

Nominate subspecies inda.

 

Tambopata Research Center [240m], Madre de Dios, Peru

Nominate subspecies alba

 

La Robellada, Peruyes, Asturias, Spain

Nominate subspecies ignicapilla

 

La Robellada, Peruyes, Asturias, Spain

Nominate subspecies urubitinga.

 

Heath River Wildlife Center [200m], La Paz Dept., Bolivia

Nominate subspecies leucorodia

 

Marazion Marsh, Cornwall, UK

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Nominate subspecies ardesiacus.

 

Refugio Amazonas [230m], Tambopata, Madre de Dios, Peru

Nominate subspecies ecaudatus.

 

Tambopata Research Center [240m], Madre de Dios, Peru

Nominate subspecies nigrifrons.

 

Tambopata Research Center [240m], Madre de Dios, Peru

Nominate subspecies carbo

 

Tunnel Beach, Falmouth, Cornwall, UK

Nominate subspecies ocellatus.

 

Los Amigos Biological Station [280m], Madre de Dios, Peru

Nominate subspecies ostralegus

 

Falmouth Bay, Cornwall, UK

Nominate subspecies rupestris.

 

Rio Madre de Dios [230m], Near Los Amigos Biological Station, Madre de Dios, Peru

* nominated for StudioWorks, Harvard GSD

Nominate subspecies aristotelis

 

Falmouth Bay, Falmouth, Cornwall, UK

Nominate subspecies rupestris.

 

Muyuna Lodge [105m], Iquitos, Loreto, Peru

Nominate subspecies tenuirostris.

 

Chonta [3405m], Cusco, Peru

Nominated to become president of Venezuela, he use to be a comedian. Better him than Chavez.

 

Voten por el Conde

Nominate subspecies brunneiventris.

 

Llulluchapampa Camp [3750m], Inca Trail, Machu Picchu, Cusco, Peru

Nominate subspecies leucorodia

 

Marazion Marsh, Cornwall, UK

Nominate subspecies canorus

 

Rivière du Vincin, Vannes, France

Nominate subspecies domesticus

 

La Playa de Vega, Asturias, Spain

Nominate subspecies alba

 

Gyllyngvase Beach, Falmouth, Cornwall, UK

Nominate subspecies alba

 

La Robellada, Peruyes, Asturias, Spain

Blue Whistling Thrush (Black Billed Nominate)

 

M. c. caeruleus (Scopoli, 1786) – Black-billed Whistling-thrush – C & E China (from SE Gansu and E Sichuan, E to N Hebei and Zhejiang, S to Guangdong and Guangxi); non-breeding also S to E Myanmar, N Thailand, Laos and N Vietnam.

 

The blue whistling thrush (Myophonus caeruleus) is a whistling thrush present in the mountains of Central Asia, China and Southeast Asia. It is known for its loud human-like whistling song at dawn and dusk. The widely distributed populations show variations in size and plumage with several of them considered as subspecies. Like others in the genus, they feed on the ground, often along streams and in damp places foraging for snails, crabs, fruits and insects.

 

This whistling thrush is dark violet blue with shiny spangling on the tips of the body feathers other than on the lores, abdomen and under the tail. The wing coverts are a slightly different shade of blue and the median coverts have white spots at their tips. The bill is yellow and stands in contrast. The inner webs of the flight and tail feathers is black. The sexes are similar in plumage.

 

Several populations are given subspecies status. The nominate form with a black bill is found in central and eastern China. The population in Afghanistan, turkestanicus, is often included in the widespread temminckii which has a smaller bill width at the base and is found along the Himalayas east to northern Burma. The population eugenei, which lacks white spots on the median coverts, is found south into Thailand. Cambodia and the Malay peninsula have crassirostris, while dichrorhynchus with smaller spangles occurs further south and in Sumatra. The Javan population, flavirostris, has the thickest bill. The subspecies status of several populations has been questioned.

 

It is found along the Tian Shan and Himalayas, in temperate forests and subtropical or tropical moist montane forests. The species ranges across Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Cambodia, India, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, Nepal, Tajikistan, Thailand, Tibet, Turkmenistan, and Vietnam. They make altitudinal movements in the Himalayas, descending in winter.

 

The blue whistling thrush is usually found singly or in pairs. They hop on rocks and move about in quick spurts. They turn over leaves and small stones, cocking their head and checking for movements of prey. When alarmed they spread and droop their tail. They are active well after dusk and during the breeding season (April to August) they tend to sing during the darkness of dawn and dusk when few other birds are calling. The call precedes sunrise the most during November. The alarm call is a shrill kree. The nest is a cup of moss and roots placed in a ledge or hollow beside a stream. The usual clutch consists of 3 to 4 eggs, the pair sometimes raising a second brood. They feed on fruits, earthworms, insects, crabs and snails. Snails and crabs are typically battered on a rock before feeding. In captivity, they have been known to kill and eat mice and in the wild have been recorded preying on small birds.

Nominated by Tanya Cromwell

Nominate subspecies castelnaudii.

 

Soraypampa [3840m], Cusco, Peru

Nominate subspecies menstruus.

 

Blanquillo Claylick [280m], Madre de Dios, Peru

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