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  • Double-banded Plovers

    So small and frail - yet they fly to New Zealand every year to breed. I haven't seen then on the beach for awhile, so I guess/hope they are now in NZ? Another wonder of Nature.

    #1


    #2


    #3





    Moruya Heads. D7000 Tamron 16-300mm. Sept 3
    Alan

    D7500 | iPhone XS Max | Mac

    Flickr Instagram

  • #2
    Nice shots Alan, they look great with the ocean and waves as a background. Amazing that they can fly all the way to NZ.
    Cheers, Brad.

    Comment


    • Isac
      Isac commented
      Editing a comment
      I suppose it's easy to fly all that way, when they "Fly United".

  • #3
    New Zealand is just a walk in the park compared to other migrations.

    ABC Science - "In March wader birds gather on Australian shores before flying north to breeding grounds as far away as Siberia. They'll fly between 10-15,000 kilometres and lose half their weight on the way.
    Out of the estimated 3 million wader birds in Australia, about 2 million leave at this time of year. When they reach their final destination, where they stay for only a brief few weeks, they find the Arctic alive with insect life - just the sort of food young wader birds need.

    Flyways are the regular routes taken by migrating birds. The flocks must rely on a series of three or four stopovers on their journey. If just one of these points becomes unsafe or degraded it can spell disaster for the whole migration. "


    This is happening now in Japan/China eg where foreshore environments are being reclaimed.

    Very interesting reading below..

    http://www.abc.net.au/science/articl...01/2685071.htm

    https://www.ehp.qld.gov.au/wildlife/...es/shorebirds/

    Alan

    D7500 | iPhone XS Max | Mac

    Flickr Instagram

    Comment


    • #4
      Nature is incredible. The short tailed shearwaters, which nest along this coast of Tasmania, do a complete circuit of the Pacific and return to the exact same burrow as they used in the previous year. I grew up with a rookery 'up the back yard' so to speak.

      You did well to capture these small birds in flight.

      Comment


      • #5
        nice work, I think having them in flight like this shows them in a rarely photographed way
        Stephen Davey. Nikon Shooter

        Comment


        • #6
          Nice timing to get these little fellas Alan and the scene is equally inspiring. Usually if I hear Plover, I think it's the cops!
          I Shoot A Canon

          Web: isacimages.com / My Gear / Flickr Photostream
          My memory's not as sharp as it used to be.
          Also, my memory's not as sharp as it used to be.

          Comment


          • #7
            Thanks Gents
            Alan

            D7500 | iPhone XS Max | Mac

            Flickr Instagram

            Comment


            • #8
              Nice and sharp for moving objects.
              A HAPPY PENTAX USER

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