ML278606491
- 年齡
- 未確定
- 性別
- 未確定
觀察細節
**rare; I was standing at the midpoint of the Parking Lot thicket when I noticed a smallish loon veering up from the direction of West Beach and heading right towards me. I noticed a chinstrap and immediately assumed it would be a Red-throated, which seemed to match in size, and since it was coming right for me I started taking pictures thinking it would be a good case study to show how similar Red-throateds can look to Pacifics. I blasted photos as it made a low pass over me and was lost to the E, although it was so low that maybe it did not go far and just plopped down somewhere on that side. I looked at the pictures quickly thereafter, since it looked sort of interesting through the viewfinder but was nonetheless surprised to see it was a clear Pacific Loon. No field notes, but the relevant field marks in the images are: 1) obvious complete, *narrow* chinstrap (unlike the broad dusky throat of immature Red-throated); 2) dark of face extends below eye and pale eye arcs set off the dark eye from the dark face; 3) sides of neck with completely straight juncture between dark neck and white foreneck; 4) complete vent strap; 5) bill like a small, dagger-shaped Common Loon bill, not upturned like Red-throated; 6) overall size and structure like small Common Loon; 7) smoothly rounded head. Full chinstrap, vent strap, and dark femoral tract all visible and eliminate Arctic Loon from consideration. A first for hotspot and first eBird record for county—previous reports I know of have all proven to be misidentified or totally undocumented birds. Below are all five photos I took; thanks to Ryan Schain for some help with cleanup of the rather dark images at extremely high ISO.
技術資訊
- 型號
- Canon EOS 7D
- 鏡頭
- EF400mm f/5.6L USM
- ISO
- 5000
- 焦距
- 400 mm
- 閃光
- Flash did not fire
- 光圈值
- f/5.6
- 快門
- 1/5000 sec
- 次方
- 2696 pixels x 1700 pixels
- 原始檔案大小
- 2.91 MB