Wild Bird: Top 5 Photos of the Week
Successfully photographing wild bird is difficult and calls for different techniques than those used to photograph birds and wildlife in more open habitats.
So let’s see in this article, some amazing “wild bird” photos that we have featured from our Facebook group.
Weekly Feature (13 Sept – 19 Sept 2021): Wild Bird:
Tiny, short-tailed green parrot. Note bright red bill and red rump. Male has a bright powder-blue throat patch. Often perches high in the forest canopy and proves difficult to see; listen for its odd, high-pitched “zi-zi-zi” given while in flight. Inhabits wooded habitats from primary forest to agricultural edge; some populations undertake regional migrations.
But this photo has photographed in Parinche, Maharashtra.
Elegant and stately large plover-like bird. Note typically erect posture, strong black-and-white brow pattern, orange-suffused crown and chest, and slightly downcurved dark bill. Cream-colored Courser is much paler and more uniformly colored. Indian Courser inhabits dry open spaces, including rocky plains and arid areas with scattered scrubs. Gathers in small flocks outside of the breeding season.
So this wild bird photo has photographed in Bhigwan, Maharashtra, India
The red-headed vulture, also known as the Asian king vulture, Indian black vulture, or Pondicherry vulture, is an Old World vulture mainly found in the Indian subcontinent.
But this photo has photographed in Thailand.
So Indian Eagle Owl Also known as the Rock Eagle Owl, these birds can be found in the rocky scrub forest areas of the Indian sub-continent. These birds are very intelligent but have been associated with a number of superstitions and have been tagged as birds of ill omen.
But this wild bird photo has photographed in Aravalli Biodiversity Park, Gurgaon.
The Indian nightjar is a small nightjar that is a resident breeder in open lands across South Asia and Southeast Asia.
This photo has photographed in Rajkot, Gujarat.
So thank you to all the photographers who have submitted photos in the Wild Bird theme with the #pwc_wb hashtag. Your pictures can create awareness about the variety and beauty of wildlife in our environment. So feel free to share it on your social media.
We have featured these photos from our Facebook Group. Next week, you can be the one here, for that, Please join the group and follow the Weekly Challenge Rule.