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Sep 30, 2014

CWF Annual Photo Contest 2014 deadline nears


The Canadian Wildlife Federation Reflections of Nature Annual Photo Contest for 2014 has a deadline of 11.59 p.m., E.S.T. on October 31, 2014.   Entry details are available on the Canadian Wildlife Federation website.   Below are two winning bird photographs from the 2013 contest.

 2013 Professional Category ~ Grand Prize Winner
Mircea Costina

2013 Amateur Category ~ Runner-up
Serge Chenard
Please comment if you wish.
Bthe

Sep 29, 2014

There is yet hope...


               Photo: blog.mallorcahiking.com                         
Egyptian Vulture
WildlifeExtra.com reported earlier this year, that the notorious power line from Port Sudan to the Red Sea coast, which was reported to have electrocuted hundreds, perhaps thousands, of migrating endangered Egyptian Vultures over the past 60 years, has been disconnected.   The action was taken by the Sudanese government and power company officials after many years of advocacy by many birding organizations.   A new fully-insulated distribution power line will provide safe perches for the migrating birds.   The multi-agency project will make migration by birds such as Egyptian Vultures and juvenile Eastern Imperial Eagles (see photo below) a huge conservation forward leap.

                                                                                                             Photo by Csaba Loki
Eastern Imperial Eagle (juvenile)


Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 28, 2014

Vultures intruded upon

Photo: Nottingham Trent University
Vultures are seen feeding on a carcass in Manke Wildlife Reserve in South Africa.   The Black-backed Jackal intruding on the vulture feast appears to me to be a very pregnant and hungry female.   The carcass looks to be large, perhaps a water buffalo.

Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 26, 2014

Gannets gorging in Scotland


Photo by Richard Shucksmith / Barcroft Media
Gannets dive into the sea to gorge themselves on fish in the Shetland Islands, Scotland, before returning to their nests on cliffs high above the water.   The photographer, Richard Shucksmith has been capturing gannet images for the past three years and judging by this photograph, he must be an intrepid fellow.

Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 24, 2014

Bees and wasps displace hummers


Photos by Barry Wallace
Our Ruby-throated Hummingbirds appear to have left us and headed south.   The last two we saw were females on September 22 - the same exact date on which last year's hummers packed their bags and departed.   A couple of very chilly nights seemed to be the catalyst or maybe they were just fed up with fighting off the bees and wasps at the nectar feeders.   Below are some of the Bald-faced Hornets (Dalichovespula maculata) that seem to be the most troublesome for hummingbirds in September.


Bald-faced Hornets are also known as Bald Hornet, White-faced Hornet, White-tailed Hornet, Blackjacket or Bull Wasp, and actually belong to a genus of Yellowjackets, which are known elsewhere in the world as just plain wasps.   The White-faced Hornet is a little larger than other Yellowjackets, measuring 2 to 3 cms. or over 1" long.   I sat outside for an hour or so this afternoon, just to make sure there were, in fact, no more hummingbirds.   I had a glass of white wine beside me and during the course of the hour, about 10 wasps and four Bald-faced Hornets fell into my wineglass, something the hummingbirds have never done. 
BULLETIN: This just in...my wife has called out, while I was typing the last sentence above, that she has spotted a hummingbird in the backyard.
I am going to regard her sighting as that of a transient migrant passing through, as opposed to one of the resident hummers we had all summer in the yard.   So there.

 Please comment if you wish.
BtheB  
  

Sep 22, 2014

Largest flying bird ever?


Illustration by Liz Bradford/PA
I just came across an online article, by Nishad Karim at theguardian.com, that appeared almost three months ago, about fossilized bones discovered during an airport terminal expansion near Charleston, S.C. airport in 1983. The prehistoric bird had a wingspan between 6.1 and 7.4 metres which is double that of the Royal Albatross, the world's largest flying bird alive.   30 years passed before the full importance of the fossil remains were fully realized.   The name of the bird is Pelagornis sandersi.   
Illustration by Liz Bradford/PNAS
In the illustration above, the skeletal reconstruction of Pelagornis sandersi is compared with a California Condor (lower left) and Royal Albatross (lower right) for purposes of scale.   The remains of the bird included its skull, shoulder blade, hollow leg and wing bones.   Extrapolations of the mass, wingspan and wing shape from the fossilized bones were fed into a computer to estimate the size of the bird and how it may have flown.   The computer model showed the creature was an extremely efficient glider.   It was estimated to have lived 25 million years ago.

Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 21, 2014

50 years of 'Wildlife Photographer of the Year' book

The National History Museum in London, England, has just published and released a new book that commemorates 50 years of its Wildlife Photographer of the Year competition.   Below are two photos that feature birds, which are part of the collection of 160 photos in the book.

Photo by Cherry Alexander (UK) 1995
This magnificent blue iceberg was photographed from a ship off the South Sandwich Islands in Antarctica.   It's described as a cathedral of ancient ice, with a little group of Adelie Penguins and an Antarctic Prion perfectly poised overhead.   To catch the moment and frame it perfectly reveals the skill of a photographer (Cherry Alexander) in love with ice..

Photo by Danny Green (UK) 2009
One of the last great wildlife spectacles to be seen in northern Europe is the winter evening gathering of hundreds of thousands of starlings over their roost sites.   Here the stage is Gretna Green in Scotland with the swooping, swirling flock boosted by huge numbers of wintering starlings from Scandanavia.

Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 20, 2014

Yes...it was a starling

Well, I have it on good authority that my mystery bird of the last several weeks was indeed a European Starling.   Two readers of this blogsite kindly suggested the bird in the photo was a juvenile starling.   Thank you to Lucy Robertson and Andrew S. for their directions to photos and indentifications of this common bird.   In fact, starlings are one of the most common and numerous birds in the world.   It is also a bird with a 'coat of many colours', based on its stages of early growth and thereafter the seasons of the year.   After hearing from Lucy and Andrew, I got word from my neighbour, here in the village of King City, Gerry Binsfeld, that my mystery bird was a young starling starting to molt out of its juvenile plumage.   Gerry, by the way, has a huge life list and is one of Canada's best birders.   Although I have been a birdwatcher for many years, I don't consider myself an expert.   Nevertheless, not identifying a starling in my own backyard is very humbling and a bit embarrasing.


    Photo by Barry Wallace
Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 19, 2014

Dramatic White-tailed Eagles photo


Photo by Kevin Morgans

Above is a recent Wildlife Extra.com 'Reader photo of the week'.   The image of sparring White Eagles (Haliaeetus leucocephalus) was captured by Kevin Morgans in Kutno, Poland. The encounter was watched by a group of young eagles plus a Hooded Crow and a magpie.   White-tailed Eagles are closely related to Bald Eagles and are also known as Sea Eagles or White-tailed Sea Eagles. 

Please comment if you wish.
BtheB 

Sep 17, 2014

Costello welcomes his sons to Pine Farms Orchard


Photos by BarrytheBirder

Pictured above are Elvis (front) and Costello (behind), longtime buddies at King Township's Pine Farms Orchard and ambassadors-at-large to thousands of apple-pickers over many years.   Sadly, many months ago, Elvis wandered off one day and never returned.   It was felt he was embroiled in a misadventure with a fox or coyote.   Costello missed him greatly over the past winter.   He was given a mirror to make him think he was not alone.   Later in the year he was taken away to mate with a lady friend, which apparently took all of 30 seconds and he was rewarded with two fine sons that were destined to join their father at Pine Farms, when they were big enough to hold their own with the old man.   The day has come.   The sons arrived on September 13 and were welcomed by their father, whose tail, it is said, wagged a mile-a-minute.   Today, everything seemed just ducky.


Costello spent time grooming himself prior to his sons' arrival and got his top-knot just right.


On arrival, Costello's sons took to the pool like 'ducks to water', while their father looked on.


It appears that Costello has welcomed his offspring with open arms.

Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 14, 2014

Small feeder ~ big appetites


Photo by BarrytheBirder
AAmerican Goldfinches ~ Niger SeedA
Now that the juvenile goldfinches have joined their parents at our backyard Niger Seed feeders, things are getting a little crowded and a bit frantic.   Amid the mayhem, however, there are some parents that are still feeding seeds to begging youngsters.   Whether it's their own offspring or those of some other parents, I have no idea.

Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 11, 2014

Pied Wagtail gets a reprieve


Photo: Wild About Britain
Rogue wagtail won't be shot
The Guardian newspaper in England reports that a Pied Wagtail that had taken up residence in a Tesco store in Great Yarmouth will continue to fly after a plan to shoot the bird ruffled shoppers' feathers.   The bird had avoided all attempts to trap it and shoo it outside over recent weeks, so using a marksman to shoot it (after store hours) was suggested.   Word got out and their was a public backlash.   On advice, Tesco called on the British Trust for Ornithology and has postponed the shooting.   Plans now are to net the bird which has become quite tame.   The pretty little bird has been sustaining itself by eating crumbs off the cafe floor.   This tale will likely have a merciful and happy ending.

Please comment if you wish.
BtheB  

Are birds open-minded?




                                                                
...doesn't seem so.
 ~~ from an unsigned email making the rounds
Please comment if you wish. 
BtheB

Sep 10, 2014

I still haven't identified this bird after 4 weeks

Photo by BarrytheBirder
Does anyone know or have a guess?
I have enlarged this photo in hopes that this much larger view will allow for an identification. It is starting to bother me that I haven't found the name of this bird...particularly when it has such a distinctive appearance. It may be a hybrid or cross-breed and my best guess would be a cross between a Northern Mockingbird and Starling.    Any suggestions would be very much appreciated.   

Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 9, 2014

2014 British Wildlife Photography Awards



The  overall winning picture was an image by Lee Acaster of a wild Greylag Goose on a grey, moody London riverbank. 


First place in the Behaviour category was this photo by Richard Shuttleworth of an otter capturing a puffin in the Shetland Islands.


Steven Fairbrother won the Portrait section with this image of a shag resting in the Farne Islands in Northumberland.

Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 8, 2014

Robber Fish Eagles



                                                                              Photo by Eugene Troskie/Barcroft Media
Two of three Fish Eagles are seen (above) in a photo by Eugene Troskie, ganging-up on an alarmed Saddle-backed Stork to steal its fish in Kruger National Park in South Africa.   This bird is also known as the Saddle-billed Stork (see photo below by Steve Garvie/Flickr/Wikipedia.   One can't help but wonder if the eagle which carried off the fish shared it with the other two.

Photo by Steve Garvie/Flickr/Wikipedia
Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 6, 2014

National Hummingbird Day ~ September 6


                                                                                                                                                               Photos by Barry Wallace
Study says 'hummers' not born with sweet tooth
Jessica Ramos writing on the Care2 website says that according to National Geographic magazine, hummingbirds don't have a sweet taste receptor, like most birds.   However, a new study in Science says that the tiny birds outsmarted evolution by "re-purposing" their umami receptor - the evolutionary receptor responsible for identifying savory meat flavours - to taste and enjoy sweet nectar.   It was never meant to be for hummers to have a sweet tooth but the determined birds made it come about.   Now they are meat-eaters and nectar-sippers.   Future plans are to determine if all species of hummingbirds have undergone this evolutionary adaptation.   Have two diets given hummingbirds any evolutionary advantage? Well they have grown to 300 species in the Americas   


Please comment if you wish.
BtheB

Sep 1, 2014

Another early warbler

Photo by BarrytheBirder
I'm not sure which warbler this might be.   It arrived in the backyard cedar hedge long enough for me to get this picture, but was then scared off by the 30-or-so American Goldfinches in the same hedge.   It did not return.   I'm guessing Yellow, Pine, or Wilson's.   Anyone care to hazard a guess?   This is the second migrating warbler in the backyard this week.   Last Monday there was a Blackburnian. 
Please comment if you wish.  
BtheB