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Posts posted by birdbrain22
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Agree... hard to mistake that one.
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Agree 100% young Peregrine here.
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Agree with Baltimore Oriole
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1 hour ago, The Bird Nuts said:
This appears to be a juvenile Northern Goshawk with the heavily-streaked buffy breast, pale supercilium, and the many wavy, thinner tail bands. Merlins have dark eyes and thin pale bands on a dark tail.
Agree... look at the bulkiness in pic 3 as well.
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17 hours ago, akandula said:
Welcome to Whatbird and nice bird!
I agree with an Indigobird sp. I just wanted to make a note that the only Indigobird sp. that I have heard of that was recorded of escaping captivity and found on other continents (such as U.S. and U.K.) is the Village, as it is the most widespread Indigobird. I am not guaranteeing you that this bird is a Village Indigobird, but all I am saying is that it is the single species I would bet on for this escaped pet.
Yeah I am not sure if one is more popular in pet trade or not. I just knew it was an Indigobird and forgot how many species there were... and then I looked and made my second post. I think there may have been relatively recent splits into some new species too
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Agree with Robin
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21 minutes ago, birdbrain22 said:
This is one of the Indigobirds... my guess would be Dusky
or Village or one of the other species that look identical! lol
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4 hours ago, akiley said:
Both are correct.
seconded
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5 hours ago, The Bird Nuts said:
I agree with akandula.
Me too... as always late to the party.
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This is one of the Indigobirds... my guess would be Dusky
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FWIW...not certain, but I like Acadian here.
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I definitely want another photo as well... but I am leaning Yellow-bellied from this alone
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23 hours ago, blackburnian said:
Very nice bird. Should be reported if it hasn't. I've seen the Dry Tortugas colony. I'd be shocked if the OP got this close to those birds.
So it is a rehabilitating/rescue bird... which explains the close-up shot.
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I agree with Veery here. The Newfoundland population/race is much browner overall and darker in the face. We have banded some and they look nothing like the "typical" veery
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Common Redshank and female Tufted Duck
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Arctic Terns, Purple Sandpipers and a Redwing
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1 hour ago, The Bird Nuts said:
1. I'd call this a Warbling based on the lack of dark lores
2-3. Agree with Pine Warbler
4. Agree with Blackburnian Warbler
5. Cape May Warbler, I think
6-7. Agree with Warbling Vireo
This is where I am at as well. I agree with all... including the "I think" part on #5
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Agree with Mississippi Kite and Broad-winged Hawk here.
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This is a immature Cooper’s Hawk
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I can not open any of dropbox links in any of the England threads...
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Agree all the pics in this thread show Mallards(including the white domestic in pic 1)
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Agree with Winter Wren
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@wolffish @Trevor L. #4 looks better for a female Twite based on a few things:
Yellow bill, deeply fork tail, heavy streaking on back, and buff wingtips among other things.
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Grainy photos… Eastern Phoebe(q)
in Help Me Identify a North American Bird
Posted
Looks good for Eastern Phoebe