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Crowing male grey partridge (Perdix perdix).
The Marbled Duck or Marbled Teal (Marmaronetta angustirostris).
Close-up of Potato plants in bloom against dark background. White and yellow flowers of Solanum tuberosum
Pintail duck in the marsh.
Marsh Tit, Animal, Animal Body Part, Animal Eye, Animal Head
Catfish
The crested lark or Galerida cristata common small grey brown bird on the green sunny background.
L 46-56cm, WS 78-90cm.\nGadwall duck breeds on variety of fresh waters, mostly on eutrophic lakes or bays with reed beds and wooded islets.\n\nThis Duck is becoming quite common in the Netherlands in the last Decades.
A closeup of white Agapanthus orientalis, lily of the Nile.
Corydalis cava, Hohler Lerchensporn, poisonous plant, Hainich National Park, Thuringia
Western Meadowlark on a winter roadside
English name: Spotted wood quail\nScientific name: Odontophorus guttatus\n\nCountry: Costa Rica\nLocation: San Gerardo de Dota
Shorebird - Little Ringed Plover Charadrius dubius on green background, wildlife Poland Europe
Grey partridge cockerel standing on a meadow.
Stellaria graminea blooms in the wild in summer
Great tit (Parus major)
Columbine in bloom in the early spring with white and lilac blossoms.
Anemopsis californica, with the common names Yerba mansa or lizard tail. Growing in the Alabama Hills, Owens Valley, California.
Poecile palustris
L 24-27cm, WS 47-53cm.\nBreeds on inland and coastal marshes, wet meadows and moorland.\nOn Passage and in winter, singly or in flocks mainly on or near coast.\nWary and noisy during breeding season. Nest on ground.\n\nThis beautiful small wader is a quite common breeding bird in the Netherlands in the described Habitats.
A pintail drake swimming in the pond, Anas acuta
Male common merganser cruising along
Female Long-tailed Duck swimming in tranquil waters
Middle spotted woodpecker climbing on an apple tree.
A Woodpecker arrives on the deck
Ruddy shelduck (Tadorna ferruginea)
Common pochard male Aythya ferina on water. Pochard swimming in the lake.
Sanderling, Calidris alba, Parker River National Wildlife Refuge, Plum Island, Massachusetts
The marsh tit (Poecile palustris)
A spring germinated annual, rather like M. altissima, but the flowers white, slightly smaller, 4-5mm, the standard petal longer than the wings and keel. Pod 3-5mm, hairless, greyish brown when ripe.\nHabitat: Open places, especially on arable land and fields, in waste places and alongroadsides, a fairly frequent weed or ruderal, to 1850m.\nFlowering Season: July-September.\nDistribution: Widespread through Europe, more local or rare in Holland and Scandinavia; naturalized in Britain and Belgium.
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