Photobomb during a photoshoot with Bill the neighborhood cat.
male latched onto a very confused terrapin
Female moving 5 kits from Stage island to Cross Farm Hill.
(Observation for Stoat: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/45181524)
The first time I had ever seen this, i videoed the entire event as well from entry to exit. It was as if this species swims all the time. I sent it to a frogmouth expert and she had never seen that before. The bird chose to swim and flew away very easily after its swim. There appeared to be no explanation for the bird swimming as it was not particularly hot or anything unusual.
A common bird on the Daintree river , but one of the most amazing fishing birds. This birds can fish from a spot quite far above the water and hang upside stretch their neck out and successfully catch a fish. When first observed no one can believe they can fish from that height. To watch them go totally upside down is absolutely amazing.
Observartion for the flower: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/28181233
Observation for the bee: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/28181272
A very cooperative bittern!
Un momento único y privilegiado de la vida salvaje; un registro histórico para nuestro País: Un Flamenco Americano (derecha) y un Flamenco Chileno (izquierda) juntos en estado salvaje, insertados en una de las ciudades con mayores índices de contaminación ambiental en México.
Un individuo errante que dará mucho de qué hablar...
¡PARQUE METROPOLITANO DE LEÓN, UN LUGAR PRIVILEGIADO PARA PAJAREAR, MÁS DE 140 ESPECIES DE AVES QUE PUEDES OBSERVAR!
This observation is not for the tiger, it is for the Eastern Chipmunk on the right.
Is it a fish? Is it a slug? Is it a fishy anemone? I do not have a clue what this is!
It is about 30mm long and there were a few of them in the sand - outgoing tide nearly on the turn. Most were buried and only the "fan fin" was showing.
Resting on the wet sand, when the sand collapsed it arched it's face upwards (2nd and third photos) and seem to spawn capsule from somewhere - there are 2 floating in the 4th pic.
Totally hypnotic, by the time my sister-in-law and I carried on the brother had walked 2kms away from us!
I believe this is the first of its kind ever reported. Both Ebird and inaturalist do not have a taxonomical category for this hybrid. I have lots more photos of this individual and hopefully someone will forward this to the right person to get a category established.
Dilute plumage individual in my yard
This little muffin has the distinction of being the first bird banded of my ornithological career.