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Pukeko or swamp hen
Eurasian coot walking in grass
American darter  Venice Area Audubon Society Florida
Magnificent frigatebird cub (Fregata magnificens), Galapagos Islands National Park, Ecuador.
A scenic view of a Florida Sandhill Crane bird found in the wilderness
Closed up beautiful stock bird, adult Asian woolly-necked stork or Asian woollyneck, low angle view, side shot, in the morning foraging food on the ground of agriculture area in nature of tropical dry forest, national wildlife reserve in northeastern Thailand.
A Great cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo), calling at the Ras Al Khor Wildlife sanctuary in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
The Great-Tailed Grackle or Mexican Grackle (Quiscalus mexicanus) is a highly social North and South American medium-sized songbird.  The males are glossy black and iridescent and the females are brown and drab colored.  Although the grackle is black, it is not a blackbird.  It is sometimes mistaken for a crow but is not a member of that family either.  Great-tailed grackles originally came from the tropical lowlands of Central and South America but over the past 140 years have spread into North America.  Grackles forage in pastures, wetlands and mangroves for a wide variety of food.  They eat larvae, insects, nestlings, worms, tadpoles, fish and eggs.  They remove parasites from cattle and eat fruits and grains.  Grackles are highly intelligent birds that can solve complex problems to get food.  The male grackle has a distinctive noisy call.  They communally roost in trees at night and during the breeding season they build a nest in the trees.  This female grackle was photographed at Walnut Canyon Lakes in Flagstaff, Arizona, USA.
Wilson's Phalarope ( (Phalaropus tricolor) in close proximity of Greater Flamingo, Punta Cormorant, Floreana, Galapagos Islands
A Masked Lapwing standing on a rock ledge in the morning sun.
Cormorants perched on a rock , on the seashore
Names: Arctic fulmar, fulmar, mallemok, northern fulmar\nScientific name: fulmarus glacialis\nCountry: Iceland\nLocation: Westfjords
A close-up of a common murre resting on a rock next to the shoreline
White-tailed eagle sitting flying over a rock in the sea at the island of Senja in Northern Norway.
Female Abyssinian Ground Hornbill (Bucorvus abyssinicus)
A Red Footed Booby sitting in a tree covered in green leaves on the Island of Genevesa, The Galapagos
Southern Ground Hornbill (Bucorvus leadbeateri) (Bromvoël) near Sirheni in the Kruger National Park, Limpopo, South Africa
Straw-necked ibis bird standing on a rock near water
Great Blue Heron nest building by gathering sticks
portrait from the back of a pelican
Anhinga spreading wings
Black bird wading through the mud
An Antarctic shag (Leucocarbo bransfieldensis) perched on a cliff overlooking Paradise Harbour.
Cape Barren goose (Cereopsis novaehollandiae) Werribee Open Range Zoo, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
birds survive and exist in the harsh conditions of Southern Africa. Walvis Bay
Western Swamphen (Porphyrio porphyrio) walking in grass with hoarfrost. This is an extremely rare species in The Netherlands, the second ever
An great blue heron chick stands in its nest squawking for food.
Common starling (Sturnus vulgaris) feeding their young in a sand pit in Burgenland, Austria, Europe
Free Images: "bestof:Little Pied Cormorants - almost ready to leave the nest. (Phalacrocorax melanoleucos) Photographed at Lake Awoonga Little Pied Cormorants - almost ready to"
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