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Long tailed shrike sitting on a branch.  Hong Kong, China
Red flanked Bush Robin,Tarsiger cyanurus,live in China(Tarsiger cyanurus cyanurus)
Specimen of house sparrow Passer domesticus watching perched on a scrub
Sparrow perched on a branch at the park.
Marsh Tit, Animal, Animal Body Part, Animal Eye, Animal Head
A Black-capped Chickadee (Poecile atricapilla) on a pine tree with food in its beak for youg birds in the nest.
Cute bird the willow tit, song bird sitting on the fir branch with snow in winter. Willow tit perching on tree in winter. The willow tit, lat. Poecile montanus.
L11,5-13cm.\nBreeds in untinned, often damp deciduous woods with plenty of dead and dying trees; also in larger gardens and parks with older fruit trees and understory.\nResident. Frequently at bird tables in winter. Fearless.\nDominant over Willow Tit where ranges overlap.\nNest s in cavity (tree-hole made by Willow Tit, nest box, natural hole etc.).\n\nThis is a less frequent Tit than Great- and Blue Tit in the Netherlands.
Beautiful Eurasian jay ( Garrulus glandarius ) is sitting on oak
Bluetit in autumn,Eifel,Germany.\nPlease see more than 1000 songbird pictures of my Portfolio.\nThank you!
A Eastern Chipmunk (Tamias striatus) looking alert on top of a boulder.
Great tit in autumn (Parus major)
Young gray shrike among dry branches of bush
Shimmering vibrant colours and diversity of species such as this Baltimore Oriole, marks Costa Rica as one of the principal Central America countries with a coastal territory and tropical rainforest that hosts migration from north America and south America to give it unparalleled numbers and variation of birdlife
common singing birds spotted in australia
Many Japanese white-eye and other birds flock to the branches of Ligustrum obtusifolium in winter to eat black berries. Native to Japan, Korea and China, Ligustrum obtusifolium, commonly called border privet, is a perennial, deciduous shrub, which grows to 3 meters in height and has many stemmed branches. White flowers appear in June and fruits appear in September and persist into winter.
Marsh Tit, Coal Tit,Blue Tit and Great Tit perching
L 10,5-12cm.\nBreeds in coniferous forest, often in older moss- and lichen-rich spruce, locally in S. Europe in deciduous woodland.\nResident. In N Europe joins winter tit bands.\nOften forage on ground or low branches. Not exactly shy, through usually difficult to approach.\nVisit bird tables only rarely.\nNest excavated in rotten trunk or stump.\n\nThis is a quite common Species in the Netherlands in the described Habitats.
The Blue Tit is a small tit that takes its name from the blue color of its crown, wings and tail. His head is remarkable. The face, largely white, is barred with three dark blue to black lines, two loral lines which pass through the eye to join the nape of the same color, and a broad gular line which joins a collar, which itself borders the cheeks white and joins the nape.
Blue Tit on a water bird bath.
The marsh tit (Poecile palustris)
Coal tit (Periparus ater) perching on a conifer.
A Woodpecker arrives on the deck
Stock photo showing close-up view of Indian palm squirrels or three-striped palm squirrel (Funambulus palmarum), pictured eating food on public park feeding station.
portrait of natural white wagtail (Motacilla alba alba) on branch
Young white-breasted nuthatch on deck railing at house in Connecticut
Willow tit (Poecile montanus) closeup.
Pied wagtail on the grass.
Curious Siberian tit on a deadwood on an autumn day in old-growth forest in Urho Kekkonen National Park, Northern Finland
A very rare leucistic (lacking in pigment) Willow Warbler
Free Images: "bestof:Poecile rufescens (Chestnut-backed chickadee) - Oakland Museum of California - DSC05315.JPG en Exhibit in the Oakland Museum of California Oakland California"
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