Common Snipe
A squat, cryptically-plumaged shorebird with a very long bill. It inhabits a wide range of wetland habitats, from damp meadows to salt marshes. Mostly inconspicuous, it feeds in muddy ground by probing with its bill, usually near reeds or other grassy cover. Often not seen until flushed, when it usually rises from fairly close range with a rough rasping call. In Asia, beware of the extremely similar Pin-tailed, Swinhoe's, and Latham's Snipes, all of which lack the white trailing edge of Common and have a slower, less erratic flight.
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Greater Flamingo
Now he paraded forward, now he marched aft. Now he shot up his neck like a periscope and twisted his head first left, then right. He flashed the black petticoat of his under feathers in single- and double-winged salutes. He moonwalked on water, raised a spindled leg balletically, from dégagé position to arabesque. Then honked like indignant geese and rasped like didgeridoos.
For all their public popularity, flamingos turn out to be poorly understood scientifically, and only lately have researchers ventured answers to basic questions like why the birds spend so much time perched on one leg, and contort their heads backward before settling down for the night; how they keep their feathers so “Miami Vice” bright, and select a well-suited mate from the deafening throng.
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