After the nesting and breeding seasons of spring and summer have passed, starlings become highly social birds, often gathering in flocks that number in the thousands. These flocks sometimes take the form of a murmuration—when the birds form a group large and dense enough that they appear to move together as a single organism, even if the movements seem arbitrary. Though scientists still don"t quite understand how the individual starlings in a murmuration coordinate their tight, fluid formations, the behavior is thought to be a way to confuse predators.
Moving as one
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
World Childrens Day
-
Don’t get lost in there
-
A personal collection becomes an institution
-
Saksun, Faroe Islands, Denmark
-
Celebrating Flag Day: ‘O long may it wave’
-
World Hello Day
-
Mapping courage in the Seventh Ward
-
Black Fell in England s Lake District
-
Seceda, Dolomites, South Tyrol, Italy
-
Wooden path to Kennedy Lake, Vancouver Island, Canada
-
Here, fishy!
-
King of the dinosaurs
-
Here we mark the price of freedom
-
Megalong Valley, Blue Mountains National Park, Australia
-
Happy Pi Day!
-
Hemingway’s Keys
-
In praise of the pipes
-
River otters at Acadia National Park, Maine
-
Happy Bee Day to you
-
Merry Christmas!
-
Vasco da Gama Bridge, Lisbon, Portugal
-
Bathing huts in Skåne County, Sweden
-
Edinburgh Art Festival
-
An emerald isle of the Emerald Isle
-
National Napping Day
-
Jane’s Carousel delights
-
San Francisco Bay salt flats
-
Polar bears
-
Abraham Lake, Alberta, Canada
-
Dancers perform ‘Revelations’
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

