TOTAL PAGEVIEWS

TRANSLATE

Tuesday 3 July 2018

8-4-2018 THORNYBUSH LODGE, SOUTH AFRICA - CHACMA BABOON (Papio ursinus)


25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN AVIARY, CAPE TOWN - SILVERY CHEEKED HORNBILL (Bycanistes brevis)



25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN AVIARY, CAPE TOWN - BUDGERIGAR (Melopsittacus undulatus)


25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN AVIARY, CAPE TOWN - SWINHOE'S PHEASANT (Lophura swinhoii)


25-3-2018 CAPE TOWN, SOUTH AFRICA - BLACK AND WHITE CASQUED HORNBILL (Bycanistes subcylindricus)


The black-and-white-casqued hornbill is found in wooded habitats in central and western Africa, ranging from western Kenya to Côte d'Ivoire with an isolated population in north Angola. The black-and-white-casqued hornbill is found mostly in Ivory-Coast, with smaller populations in its surrounding countries for West-African populations. The Central-African populations are mostly in Uganda and Kenya as well as Cameroon with smaller populations in Gabon, Tanzania and Central Africa. They are tropical birds that live in regions with high amounts of forests and is rarely seen in on flat lands, especially due to its arboreal nature.



25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN AVIARY, CAPE TOWN - ANGULATE TORTOISE (Chersina angulata)

25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN AVIARY, CAPE TOWN - SILVERY CHEEKED HORNBILL (Bycanistes brevis)




25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN AVIARY, CAPE TOWN - RUSSET NAPED WOOD RAIL (Aramides albiventris)



Monday 2 July 2018

25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN AVIARY, CAPE TOWN - TRUMPETER HORNBILL (Bycanistes bucinator)




25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN AVIARY, CAPE TOWN - SOUTHERN FISCAL SHRIKE (lanius collaris)




25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN AVIARY, CAPE TOWN - RED WINGED STARLING (Onychognathus morio)


Like other starlings, the red-winged starling is an omnivore, taking a wide range of seeds, berries, nectar from plants such as Aloe and Schotia brachypetala, and invertebrates, such as the beetle species Pachnoda sinuata. They may take nestlings and adults of certain bird species, such as the African palm swift. It will also scavenge on carrion and human food scrap.

The red-winged starling will obviously only perch on plant structures that will be able to support its weight; therefore when taking nectar it will choose certain species with strong, robust racemes with easily accessible flowers, such as that of Aloe ferox and Aloe marlothii, and not Aloe arborescens. Large flowers that can support the bird's weight, such as that of Strelitzia nicolai and certain Protea species, are also chosen.

Fruit species that this species may feed on include figs, such as the sycamore fig and others, marulas, date palm fruit, berries from species such as wild olive Olea europaea subsp. cuspidata and Euphorbia, and commercial fruit such as apples, grapes, citruses and others.

In rural areas, red-winged starlings are often spotted perching on livestock and game, such as cattle, klipspringers and giraffes, a trait shared by the pale-winged starling, and may take insects and ectoparasites such as ticks, much in the manner of oxpeckers.

25-3-2018 TABLE MOUNTAIN AVIARY, CAPE TOWN - GOLDEN PHEASANT (MALE) (Chrysolophus pictus)

2-7-2018 VILLALONGA RESERVOIR, VALENCIA - EPAULET SKIMMER DRAGONFLY (Orthetrum chrysostigma)


2-7-2018 VILLALONGA RESERVOIR, VALENCIA - SARDINIAN WARBLER (MALE) (Sylvia melanocephala)