Readers’ wildlife photos

December 26, 2025 • 8:15 am

Well, thanks to Susan Harrison we have a reader’s wildlife contribution today, but that’s about it for the queue. So, during the holidays, please think about sending in your good wildlife photos.

Susan’s captions and IDs are indented, and you can enlarge her photos by clicking on them.

A few more Belizean birds

Here’s a third and last round of birds from my recent Belize trip.  First are three of my favorites from the scrubby coastal forests in and around the Shipstern Conservation & Management Area.

Yucatan Jays (Cyanocorax yucatanicus), yellow-billed youngsters begging from their dark-billed elders:

Brown Jays (Cyanocorax morio), a more self-sufficient youngster feeding with an adult:

Ferruginous Pygmy Owl (Glaucidium brasilianum) sitting quietly in the open (and making me very happy, since it’s the last of the 19 species of owls found in the U.S. that I’ve been fortunate to see and photograph):

Next are three large tropical birds that are heavily hunted by humans, and are best seen in well-protected tracts of forest.   We saw all three of them strutting around the grounds of La Milpa Lodge in the Rio Bravo Conservation Area, the same place where on our very first day, a large male jaguar crossed the road in front of us (Jerry posted its photo as a singleton).

Ocellated Turkey (Meleagrus ocellata), a truly spectacular species found only in the Yucatan region:

Crested Guan (Penelope purpurascens):

Great Curassow (Crax rubra):

Next comes a selection of the many smaller birds that we worked to catch glimpses of in shady forest understories.   It’s a biased sample, of course; these are some of the most colorful ones.

Tody Motmot (Hylomanes momotula):

Slaty-tailed Trogon (Trogon massena):

Black-headed Trogon (Trogon melanocephalus):

Rufous-breasted Spinetail (Synallaxis erythrothorax):

Olive-backed Euphonia (Euphonia gouldi):

Red-capped Manakin (Ceratopipra mentalis):

Finally, here are a few of the generalist birds that we often saw in semi-open areas, such as at the edges of pastures and other clearings.

Pale-billed Woodpecker (Campephilus guatemalensis):

Squirrel Cuckoo (Piaya cayana):

Rufous-tailed Hummingbird (Amazilia tlacatl):

Red-lored Amazon (Amazona autumnalis):

Reader’s wildlife photos

December 25, 2025 • 8:15 am

Scott Ritchie of Cairns, Australia, posted this photo on his FB page as his Bird of the Year, along with an ID and message:

My bird of the year is, without a doubt, the Rainbow Bee-eater [Merops ornatus]. I had a piece published in Australian Birdlife on the lives of these pretty birds at our local cemetery.

This photo captures the spirit of these birds, and of Christmas. Family, friends, good food, colour and spirituality.

I will post my favourite bird photos after Christmas.

A Merry Christmas to you all.

Readers’ wildlife posts

December 23, 2025 • 8:30 am

Today we have some lovely bird photos from Scott Ritchie of Cairns, Australia. Scott’s captions are indented and you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. Scott’s Facebook page, full of great photos, is here. (Photos used with permission.)

Social media, including Facebook, gets quite a bit of negative press these days. I get that. But one of the great values of social media is that it can put you in contact with people who can really help you out. In Sept. 2025, I started posting bird photos from my Western Australia trip. I was contacted by John Edmond, who lives in Perth. Last year, I met John in Cairns on our regular Tuesday AM bird walk, and then showed him some local birds along the Cairns Esplanade. John loves a twitch, and was especially happy to see Nordy, Nordmann’s Greenshank.

So John reached out on FB and offered to take me for a day’s birding in Perth. We had a great time and I particularly liked touring around Herdsman Lake. Here are some of my favourite images from that day’s birding.

The Pink-eared Duck [Malacorhynchus membranaceus] is one of my favourite birds. I was lucky to get nice close images of this bird. If you’re wondering about the name, look carefully at the head. You can just see a little bit of pink behind his eye. Personally, I’d name it the Zebra-breasted Duck.

And another. The flaps along the bill are used to help funnel microbe-rich water into their mouth.

The Great Crested Grebe [Podiceps cristatus] is another amazing bird. I just love the hairdo and the neck feathers during breeding season. Interestingly, this bird is found in wetlands from Asia Europe, Africa, and Australia. This is one of the grebes that does a upright mating dance that you may have seen on TV:

So am I gonna get lucky tonight? Let me think about it:

JAC: Here’s a YouTube video I found of the mating dance of this species. Don’t miss any of it!

I love the raking light on this stunning bird:

The Australian Shelduck [Tadorna tadornoides] during breeding season. The female is the one with the spectacles. It’s obvious she’s the only one with a good sense to wear glasses:

I like these this couple out for an evening promenade in the quiet water:

Herdman Lake like has more than water birds. This pair of Tawny Frogmouths [Podargus strigoides] are a bit of an institution there. People come around looking for these interesting, well camouflaged birds. See me if you can:

Australian Reed Warbler [Acrocephalus australis] was regularly heard singing in the rushes. Lovely calls—the sound of the Aussie wetlands:

At an earlier stop, I was happy to see the Western Spinebill [Acanthorhynchus superciliosus]. It’s not the world’s best shot, but it’s still beautiful bird and I hope to get better views of it in the future:

And finally, I’ll leave off this WA tour with a robin, a male Scarlet Robin [Petroica boodang]. Robins are so cute and they sit nicely for the camera, not jumping around like some crazy caffeinated gym rat like so many birds do. Speaking which I’m off for a coffee and a workout to work off some of the pounds I put on this trip:

Readers’ wildlife photos

December 19, 2025 • 8:25 am

Ecologist Susan Harrison contributed another batch of photos from her visit to Belize (see part 1 here). The IDs and her captions are indented below, and you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them.

Belize – Birds of the Mennonite Farmlands

Diverse agricultural landscapes came as a pleasant surprise on a recent birding trip to northern Belize.  Small to medium-sized family farms, neatly arrayed, grew rice, cattle, chickens, fruits and vegetables.  We saw native birds of many kinds in the fields and around the homes, barns, ponds, hedgerows and woodlots.  Is this what U.S. farmlands looked like before the modern agro-industrial era, I wondered?

Many of the farmers are pious German-speaking Mennonites who settled here in the 1950s to practice their ways in a society tolerant of their anti-militarism and anti-modernity. The most conservative among them avoid not only cars but also rubber tires, and use machinery with metal wheels or treads only.  While it felt impolite to photograph the people in their hand-sewn overalls and dresses, I did grab a tractor shot or two.

Mennonite steel-wheeled tractor:

Our main quarry here was the Jabiru (Jabiru mycteria), a massive tropical stork that is scarce in much of its range but flourishes in the northern Belize farm country.

Jabiru in a rice field:

Jabirus mixed with smaller Wood Storks (Mycteria americana) and Northern Jacanas (Jacana spinosa) in a pasture of Brahman cattle:

Other birds we saw in these farmlands:

Laughing Falcons (Herpetotheres cachinnans):

Aplomado Falcons (Falco femoralis):

Bat Falcon (Falco rufigularis) pursuing dragonflies over a rice field at blinding speed:

Fork-tailed Flycatcher (Tyrannus savana):

Vermilion Flycatcher (Pyrocephalus rubinus):

Mangrove Cuckoo (Coccyzus minor):

Northern Potoo (Nyctibius jamaicensis), a bizarre giant nightjar:

Ringed Kingfisher (Megaceryle torquata):

Roadside Hawk (Rupornis magnirostris):

Morelet’s Seedeater (Sporophila morelleti):

Readers’ wildlife photos

December 15, 2025 • 8:25 am

Susan Harrison is back from Belize with bird photos for us. (And if you have any photos of your own, please send them in!).  Susan’s captions are indented, and you can enlarge her photos by clicking on them.

Belize:  the Crooked Tree Wildlife Sanctuary

Your correspondent has just returned from a birding trip to Belize, a wonderful country that has preserved over 30% of its land area for wildlife, and where a relatively small-scale and bird-friendly style of agriculture is widely practiced.  Today’s photos are from the last place we visited, the Crooked Tree Wildlife Sanctuary, a massive complex of lagoons, swamps and forests in middle northern Belize.  Our exceptionally talented guide grew up here when the small village of Crooked Tree was accessible only by boat in the wet season.  When not guiding birdwatchers, he farms coconuts and avocados here.

We were most fortunate to see the elusive Sungrebe (Heliornis fulica).  Despite its name, this waterbird haunts densely shaded riverbanks and is not a grebe; it has no close relatives.  On the heels of a heavy downpour, we observed this one rapidly plucking damselflies off of overhanging foliage.

Sungrebe:

Another exciting sighting was a colony of Boat-Billed Herons (Cochlearius cochlearius).  These nocturnal hunters do not seize their prey like other herons but instead use their enormous bills in a baleen-like fashion.  During daytime they hide in dense thickets.  This one showed us a yawn.

Boat-billed Heron:

Among the many large, fish-devouring water birds were Bare-throated Tiger Herons (Tigrisoma mexicanum) and Anhingas (Anhinga anhinga).

Bare-throated Tiger Heron:

Anhinga:

We watched as Limpkins (Aramis guarauna), a weird wading bird in its own family, speared and gobbled Apple Snails (Pomacea), this bird’s single food source.  At the same time, these snails were equally of interest to Snail Kites (Rostrhamus sociabilis), who sometimes plucked them away from the Limpkins instead of from the mud.

Limpkin, with a Northern Jacana (Jacana spinosa) in front:

Northern Jacana closeup, showing its massive feet:

Snail Kites:

Skulking by the shore we saw several Russet-naped Wood Rails (Aramides albiventris), an almost comical bird that makes all other rails seem drab indeed.

Russet-naped Wood Rail:

Raptors were also abundant, and two of the more exciting finds were Black-collared Hawks (Busarellus nigricollis) and a Gray-headed Kite (Leptodon cayanensis).

Black-collared Hawk adult and immature:

Gray-headed Kite:

We also saw many wonderful land birds at Crooked Tree, of which I’ll show just a few of the most special.  Yellow-headed Amazons (Amazona oratrix) are among the many parrots that visit Crooked Tree to feed on the local cashew crop; this species is endangered because its intelligence makes it popular in the pet trade.

Yellow-headed Amazons:

Rufous-tailed Jacamars (Galbula ruficauda) resemble giant hummingbirds but are actually insectivores more closely related to woodpeckers and toucans.    The cliffs that Jacamars require for nesting are scarce in low-lying Belize, but Mayan ruins serve the purpose nicely.  We saw this Jacamar at the impressive Lamanai ruins complex.

Rufous-tailed Jacamar:

Detail of the Jaguar Temple at the Lamanai ruins, in which the rectangular holes create a stylized jaguar face:

Olive-throated Parakeets (Eupsittula nana) occurred everywhere we went in Belize, but only in the Caribbean Pine (Pinus caribaea) woodlands of Crooked Tree did they pose low enough for decent photos.

Olive-throated Parakeets:

Readers’ wildlife photos

December 11, 2025 • 8:15 am

Today I’m putting up all the singletons and smaller batches sent to me. Readers’ captions and IDs are indented.

From Allen Jones (I don’t know the species). It’s in the UK; can readers help?

This was at a local bird of prey centre near Edinburgh. The eagle’s perched on me. The owner said that this boy or girl (not sure) would soon be the oldest eagle that had ever lived in the UK. He said it was around 50 years old.

From A. C. Harper:

Ordinary urban pigeons huddling together for warmth… but they are on a support of a bridge crossing an arm of the river Soar at Leicester. This was once open fields, then industry including extensive railway sidings, a foundry, a stone masons, several mills (afer canalization of this part of the river) and wharves for unloading coal. As you can see the industrial areas have now gone and are being replaced with houses and apartments. But the pigeons linger on ready for my cellphone, a Pixel 10 pro.

From Susan Harrison, who promises that there is more to come.

Thought you’d enjoy seeing this big Belizean kitty!  He was lounging in the road last night as we drove into the Rio Bravo Conservation Area.  He could not have cared less about us, which is always a nice thing to experience with wildlife.  Anyway, this is just a teaser, and I’ll send a batch for RWP soon.

From Bryan Lepore.

These little Eastern cottontails [Sylvilagus floridanus] are in mid-ish Massachusetts  outside of Framingham, and in my back yard.  First photo June 26, second June 29:

From Nicole in Pennsylvania: A wild cottontail that comes to humans for apple slices. Her name is Petunia:

Convergent evolution, pictures by Martin Riddle.

The Hawk Moths, aka Hummingbird Moths [JAC: Family Spingidae] love the nectar in resident maintained gardens at Brooksby Village Peabody, Massachusetts:

Readers’ wildlife photos

December 8, 2025 • 8:15 am

We have a bunch of kangaroo photos from Scott Ritchie of Cairns, Australia. Scott’s captions are indented, and you can enlarge the photos by clicking on them. (His Facebook page is here.)

My last report from my Melbourne to Sydney trip. From Depot Beach New South Wales. It was epic. We stayed in a national park cabin that looked out over the ocean. And at 5 o’clock our front lawn became the bar for Eastern Grey Kangaroos [Macropus giganteus]. And in the morning, you could take pictures of the kangaroos watching the sunrise. What could be better for a boy from Iowa?

We had a ringside seat for roos. Would have been over a dozen here, not including joeys in the pouch:

The boys like a bit of rough and tumble:

They are smart to avoid those claws:
..just barely:

Squaring off:

I missed the kick shot. A sudden loud thump. Then the fight was over. One kick!:

I don’t know how this is going work!:

But somehow it does:

White-faced Heron [Egretta novaehollandiae] loves a roo too:

Cute:

Hanging loose:

Just in time for smoko:

I love pan pipes:

It’s a tight fit:

Come on big fella. I’m already familied up:

 

Sunrise at Depot Beach:

Roo at sunrise:

Great way to start the day:

Isn’t it lovely?