ML299123391
loon sp. Gavia sp.
Laguntzailea
Data
Kokapena
- Adina
- Zehaztu gabea
- Sexua
- Zehaztu gabea
Behaketaren xehetasunak
I watched this bird for 10 minutes through the scope until it swam behind the island. Dark head and back of neck, white throat and front of neck, with a clear, sharp division between the two, quite unlike the jagged, diffuse border of a COLO. Chinstrap clearly visible when the bird turned to face me. Eye in the dark part of the head, with no white visible around it. Thin bill, slighter than a COLO. Dark black back. When diving, exhibited the behavior of kind of launching forward in an arc, unlike the typical less flamboyant dive of a COLO. Five minutes later it emerged from behind the island and was joined by a second loon identical in markings and behavior. After watching the pair for another 5 minutes, a THIRD loon appeared out of nowhere and the three of them swam together. All 3 looked identical. Given the unlikelihood of seeing 3 Pacific Loons together, I considered the possibility that I was just looking at 3 odd-looking Common Loons. I've seen many Common Loons on the lake this winter, but despite not having a Common Loon nearby for comparison, these birds just looked different from Common Loons in all the ways I noted. Viewing conditions were very good, and I got a much better look at these birds than previous sightings at the bridge. Shortly after, all 3 loons swam behind the island and disappeared from view. After a few minutes, 2 of them emerged from the south end of the island, affording even better views than I had previously. Poor photos added.
Informazio teknikoa
- Eredua
- Canon EOS 80D
- Lentea(k)
- EF400mm f/5.6L USM +1.4x
- ISOa
- 250
- Distantzia fokala
- 560 mm
- Flasha
- Flash did not fire
- f-stop
- f/8.0
- Obturadorearen abiadura
- 1/400 sec
- Dimentsioak
- 1049 pixels x 700 pixels
- Fitxategiaren tamaina originala
- 207.15 KB