The red-necked grebe has a bit of a split personality—in fact, it only lives up to its name about half the year. Its feathers are not red but brambly brown and gray throughout the winter, when it lives a low-key, quiet life in salt water along North American and European coasts. But just before it migrates to a northerly lake, pond, or swamp for breeding season, the plumage around the grebe"s throat turns a distinctive rust-red. Both males and females undergo the plumage change.
Red-necked grebes during breeding season
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Space Week isnt over yet!
-
Rainbow Mountain
-
Antarctica Day
-
Infant Sumatran orangutan, Indonesia
-
Winter in the Wild West
-
Fall comes to the Last Frontier
-
Life carries on, rising from a ship s skeleton
-
Góða ólavsøku, from the Faroes!
-
Quebec City for Winter Carnival
-
What’s blooming in New Zealand?
-
The migrating monarchs of Michoacán
-
Ludwig’s palace
-
The Tour de France begins
-
Groundhog Day
-
What the hay?
-
World Dolphin Day
-
Not your average sandcastle
-
Into the woods
-
Square Tower House in Mesa Verde National Park
-
It s Australia Day
-
Terraced rice fields, Yuanyang County, China
-
Río Negro, Amazon basin, Brazil
-
Koala in the Great Otway National Park, Australia
-
Wild garlic in bloom at Hainich National Park, Germany
-
The fantastic winter fox
-
Castle Frankenstein in Darmstadt, Germany
-
World Space Week begins
-
National Lighthouse Day
-
Winter in Old Nuuk
-
Chinese New Year
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

