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Monday, December 11, 2017
NONBREEDING BLACK-FRONTED TERN IN FLIGHT, LAKE PUKAKI AREA, CANTERBURY REGION, SOUTH ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND, 11/6/2017
We can ID this tern as a nonbreeding Black-fronted Tern by its location near a braided river (this is where it breeds), orange bill with dark tip, black patch around the eye and ear, combination of white and blue-grey plumage and orange legs.
The Black-fronted Tern is endemic to New Zealand. It is the only tern that breeds exclusively inland.
The Black-fronted Tern is a new species to our Photographic Life List, which now stands at 754.
Sunday, December 10, 2017
JUVENILE BLACK- STILT & A DUCK'S CHICKS, LAKE PUKAKI AREA, CANTERBURY REGION, SOUTH ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND
These five ducklings seem to have gotten lost from their mother. We couldn'the see the adult duck anywhere.
JUVENILE BLACK STILTS OR KAKI, LAKE PUKAKI AREA, CANTERBURY REGION, SOUTH ISLAND, NEW ZEALAND
We can ID this stilt as an immature Black Stilt or Kaki by its very long pinkish/reddish legs; long, slender, black bill and black and white plumage. Juvenile Black Stilts in their first winter plumage have a black back, smudgy grey hind neck and variable dark markings on the flanks. This plumage darkens in their second summer molt and by mid-summer they are predominantly black. The Black Stilts in these photos are juveniles in various stages of development.
The Black Stilt is endemic to New Zealand and is the world's rarest wading bird: less than 100 adults survive in the wild. They currently breed only in the MacKenzie Basin on South Island.
The Black Stilt is a new species to our Photographic Life List, which now stands at 753.
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