Ravens can talk!🐦⬛
Video by”Paige Bucalo”
appreciation post for what actual baby peafowl actually look like
Sharing curiosity with mama
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Schwanzmeisen (long-tailed tits) im Büsnauer Wiesental, Vaihingen.
Little wren, I thank you for your mighty song.
All spring and summer, your serenade is my companion.
American Woodcock demonstrates "distal rhynchokinesis," the ability to flex the end of its bill. This allows it to grab earthworms it encounters when probing in soil. Other shorebirds, including Dunlins & Sanderlings, can bend their bills in this way. 😃
The Red-fan Parrot (Deroptyus accipitrinus) puts its signature plumage to use in a few ways. When threatened, it’ll fan out its vibrant neck feathers to intimidate a foe by making itself seem larger in size. Feathers are also used in courtship rituals, when they’re raised up as come-hither collars by males and females in a display as a pair will sway their heads from side to side. Spot this bird in tropical forests throughout parts of South America, including Colombia and Peru.
Photo: Sham Edmond, CC BY 2.0, Wikimedia Commons