See Prey: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/151385788
Picture kind courtesy of Mandy Moodie
See Bird HERE: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/151385476
Picture kind courtesy of Mandy Moodie
Regular migrant through our yard
The second photo is a size comparison between the wolf and a coyote, which were in about the same position on the trail.
While walking in the veld on a quite afternoon with several family members , I heard a tiny meow coming from a nearby ant-mound. On inspection we found two tiny little kittens, still very young, huddled toward the back of the ant-mound!
Leopard cub. Photo credit: Emily Jackson.
Bradypodion pumilum, Cape Dwarf Cameleon.
Painted Bunting
Passerina ciris
male
at water hole
Las Colmenas Ranch
Hidalgo Co., Texas
18 April 2006
Rough Greensnake catching an orbweaver spider. It got close to the web and then stayed there for what felt like 10 minutes (not sure it was waiting to figure out how to catch the spider or because I had disturbed it). After a while, it finally caught the spider and seemed to have no trouble eating it. My first time seeing a wild snake catch its prey!
Not sure what is going on but this is the fourth birder that I know of who has had a phoebe perch on their binoculars or on their person at Commons Ford.
Found this super cool albanistic Egyptian goose in the park today, I have never seen a bird this big that is albino before.
Mother with a rare light blond juvenile.
Female leopard in heat with 2 attentive males
I present to you: the largest dragonfly in the world, featuring my face for size comparison! :P Photos simply don't convey its sheer size and bulk but hopefully having something for comparison helps.
Anyway, story time! This guy was flying around erratically for at least an hour and a half since we arrived - I assume due to the missing wing half. I hadn't seen it myself but a couple of my friends had, and it somehow hit me in the side of the head and quickly flew off. :P
Anyway, while we were all chilling around the river, it decided to fly straight into the waterfall (in the background in pic 3) and was promptly swept downstream. What else could I do?? I jumped in and chased after it! 😂
As you can tell from the photos, my swim was successful, and I ended up with the most enormous dragonfly I have ever seen right before me. :P I can't even properly describe how enormously huge it was. And those amazing cerci! I gave it some time to dry off, but being humid tropical Queensland, it wasn't happening very quickly. It was more than happy to sit on my hand and so I wondered if it would prefer somewhere a bit higher and drier :P
So that is how it ended up on my face! As it dried and we were plagued by march flies, the obvious solution was to give him one to eat. He accepted it gratefully and somehow ate the entire thing in a single bite. Hopefully that goes a way into showing just how huge and formidable these guys are! Not content, he then sliced his huge mandibles into my nose -_- and had to be gently prized off. He slowly lapped up blood for a while after but luckily didn't do any more biting! If I squint in the mirror I can still see a faint line there now :P
He sat for about an hour before we had to leave and I left him on a shrub. I hope he was okay with half a wing missing, but there wasn't much else I could do. All in all one of the best experiences of my life! :D
First photo is by Haley Harding because I am incapable of taking selfies :P
One of my fellow nature enthusiasts spotted this snake not far from where we observed the chameleon!
So glad I spotted it! Tiny thing the size of my pinky finger.
Wild felid on campus! Habitat unfrozen creek flanked by extensive reed beds with scarce trees. Resting on top of a tree, possibly chased there by stray dogs.
1.0 REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
1.1 Western Cape Province
Kirstenbosch National Botanic Garden, very common around flowering heaths, males, females and elcipse males, 170 m, photo, 25 March 2019. Here male.
rooivlerkspreeu/red-winged starling/onychognathus morio on Klipspringer [Oreotragus oreotragus]
While investigating snow leopard kill sites, we (@otocolobus) encountered two ~5 week old cubs at a secondary den site. Cubs were well hidden in a rock hollow beneath an overhanging Lonicera shrub.
Wonderful to stumble upon concrete signs of successful reproduction springing from Kyrgyzstan's continued commitment to meaningful snow leopard conservation.
Harassment in the skies. Heard the gull and saw the commotion, a falcon being chased by crows and a seagull. Seagull flew off after a bit but the crows continued to harass the falcon which flew off heading south-east.
Screenshot from video: https://youtu.be/kr9QLlM0Aj0
Pollinating Protea scabra: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/11086102
Taken through the windscreen with camera on Auto. This sighting set the seal on a wonderful 5 days in the Eastern Cape
A comparison of starlings.
This ob for the bird on the right.
Panthera pardus orientalis
Carcal caught on 3 camera traps - as per time you cna see his route