Please send in your photos, or at least get them ready to send, as I’ll be gone from this Wednesday through Thursday, the 31st. Today we’re featuring the birds of Iceland taken by physicist and origami master Robert Lang, traveling on a June Center for Inquiry cruise featuring Richard Dawkins. (Robert’s flower pictures from the same trip are here.) Robert’s captions are indented, and you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them.
Iceland Birds (etc.)
Continuing my recent trip to islands of the northern Atlantic—heading out from Ireland taking in Orkney, Shetland, the Faroe Islands, and then Iceland—here are some of the birds (and a few bonus mammals) we saw along the way. Most of these are from Iceland. (I am not a birder, so IDs are from Merlin ID and/or Wikipedia; corrections are welcome.)
An Arctic Tern (Sterna paradisae), taken at Grimsey Island, the northernmost spot of Iceland with a bit extending above the Arctic Circle. Visiting brought home how powerful the warming influence of the Gulf Stream is; it was light-jacket weather when we visited in June and the ground was covered in thick grassland. By contrast, six months earlier, I was slightly across the Antarctic Circle along the Antarctic Peninsula (so also in midsummer), and all was glaciers, snow, and ice:

Also from Grimsey, a Common redshank (Tringa totanus), presumably the T. t. robusta subspecies (which, according to Wikipedia, breeds in Iceland).
We visited the tiny island of Vigur, which is a habitat for Common Eider ducks (Somateria mollissima). As the photo shows, they are strongly sexually dimorphic. The island is owned by a couple who gather the eider down for use in pillows, quilts, and the like; because there are no predators on the island and the ducks are used to humans wandering about, they are quite tolerant when some of those humans are visiting tourists. They have cute chicks:
Eider duckling:
A European golden plover (Pluvialis apricaria), also from the grasslands of Grimsey:
A Black guillemot (Pluvialis apricaria) (I think), a species that is widespread in the North Atlantic:

The juveniles are mottled:
A Northern fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis), nesting in the cliffs of Grimsey. (Wikipedia tells me there are both dark and light morphs; this must be the light one):
A snow bunting (Plectrophenax nivalis), the most northerly recorded passerine in the world. I saw this one on the main island of Iceland:
One of the more distinctive seagoing birds seen along the Grimsey cliffs is the Razorbill (Alca torda), the closest living relative of the extinct Great Auk:
But the by far most distinctive seagoing bird is the Atlantic puffin (Fratercula arctica), the iconic bird of the northern Atlantic and whose representations fill tchotke shops all over:
Their clown-faced makeup is unbelievable!:
Although the majority of the wildlife we saw were birds, there were a few mammals here and there. This grey seal (Halichoerus grypus) seems to be floating quite high in the water; in fact, it’s basking on a barely submerged rock. (This is off the coast of Vigur island; that’s an Eider duck next to it):
And not an example of wildlife, but in honor of our host, I spotted this moggie wandering the streets of Ísafjörður, a tiny town in the northwest (and wildest) region of Iceland:












What a graceful shot of the Arctic Tern. It is a gorgeous photo. The wings look like origami folds.
All nice photos.
Great shot of the comical looking puffin.
At first glance I saw that seal floating on water and didn’t see the rock beneath him. Funny photo at first glance before having coffee. Maybe that’s how Jesus walked on water…rock to rock.
Beautiful portraits of some beautiful birds. It’s so nice that you managed to photograph several of these waterbirds on land, so we can see their whole bodies. Thanks!
Love the Arctic Tern, especially, but all of the pictures are beautiful. The Puffin’s portrait, framing that knowing eye, is super! What is he thinking?
An excellent set!
Ah – delightful!
There’s a puffin cereal – nice box, at least!
Wow, Eider Ducks! Thank you for these photos.
Fantastic photos. Thank you for sharing!
As the others have commented, the Arctic Tern is incredibly graceful. You must be pleased with that one. What a catch! Lots of really interesting birds there. Very cool.