| Google Map Location | | Other Related Items: (click on a photo to get larger photo and more details) |
| Male American Goldfinch - in summer plumage The male American Goldfinch is olive in the winter. Then changes to bright yellow in the spring and summer.
Photo Attributes: | Barrie, Canada, Fringillidae, Spinus, Passeriformes, 2010, Chordata, American Goldfinch, Spinus tristis, Ontario, |
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| Female Amercian GoldFinch - Perched A female American Goldfinch, perched at feeder.
Photo Attributes: | Barrie, Canada, Fringillidae, Spinus, Passeriformes, 2010, Chordata, American Goldfinch, Spinus tristis, Ontario, |
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| | Perched Black-Capped Chickadee A black-capped chickadee perched on tree branch. The chickadee allowed me to get within ten feet for this photo.
Photo Attributes: | Barrie, Aves, Canada, Paridae, Poecile, Passeriformes, North America, 2014, Chordata, Black-capped Chickadee, Poecile atricapillus, Ontario, |
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| Robins nest with four eggs. Photo of four eggs in a robins nest, one day before hatching.
Photo Specific Links: | eHow - How to Identify a Robin Eggs Nest | | from site: The Robin is one of the singing birds who arrive in early spring from their migration route. Robin birds generally build their nests anywhere: the top of a tree, on a rose bush, a house window, even on the lawn. They eat berries, worms and insects.
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| | Baby Robins sleeping in nest. Photo of two day old robins sleeping in nest.
Photo Specific Links: | Caring for baby birds | | from site: If you're a birdwatcher it's bound to happen. You are going to come upon a baby bird out of the nest. Wondering what can be done to help care and feed them is a question that we get often. It's important to know what you can do, and what you can't do when you find young birds.
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Related Links | Photo Specific Links: | Robin - coloring page of robin feeding babies | | from site: Spring means such different things in different parts of the country. Here in the desert I notice we have baby lizards and delicate damselflies. We get a lot of spring migrant birds, too. A whole flock of robins settled in some berry bearing bushes in front of me the other day and I realized they would be a perfect spring coloring page.
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| | Canada Links: | Canada - Wikipedia | | Government of Canada Site | | Official web site for the Government of Canada.
| | Ontario Links: | Government of Ontario, Canada | | Official Governtment site for the province of Ontario.
| | Turdus Links: | Turdus genus - also kn ow as True Thrush | | The true thrushes are medium-sized mostly insectivorous or omnivorous birds in the genus Turdus of the thrush family Turdidae.
| | | Turdus in Encyclopedia Britannica | | from site: Representative true thrushes are species of the genus Turdus, which include the blackbird, fieldfare, ouzel, and redwing of Europe, as well as the American robin. Other true thrush groups are called ground thrush and nightingale thrush.
| | Turdus migratorius Links: | American Robin (Turdus migratorius) at allaboutbirds.org | | from site: The quintessential early bird, American Robins are common sights on lawns across North America, where you often see them tugging earthworms out of the ground. Robins are popular birds for their warm orange breast, cheery song, and early appearance at the end of winter.
| | | North American Robin - wikipedia | | form site: The American Robin or North American Robin (Turdus migratorius) is a migratory songbird of the thrush family. It is named after the European Robin[3] because of its reddish-orange breast, though the two species are not closely related, with the European robin belonging to the flycatcher family.
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Photo Data | | Make:NIKON Model:E8700 DateTime:2007:05:30 20:44:02 Exposure Time:1/130 F:59/10 ISO:100 DateTimeDigitized :2007:05:30 17:41:23 DateTimeOriginal :2007:05:30 17:41:23 |
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