You don"t need to be a bird expert to notice the wheatear darting across open ground. These ground-dwelling songbirds are known for their upright posture and habit of hopping or sprinting between perches. Despite the name, wheatears have nothing to do with wheat or ears—the name is a twist on the old phrase "white arse," pointing to the bird"s distinctive white rump found in most species. The northern wheatear weighs less than an ounce, but travels thousands of miles between its summer homes in Alaska and northern Canada to its wintering grounds in Africa. Its migration route is one of the longest for a bird its size. Unlike many backyard songbirds, wheatears prefer wide-open spaces with low vegetation, where they can sprint and pounce on insects. And while most North American birders might only catch them in the far north, wheatears are widespread across Europe, Asia, and Africa.
A wheatear in Peak District National Park, England
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
National Moon Day
-
Castle on a hill
-
Batten down the hatches
-
Humpbacks return to the Inside Passage
-
World Nature Conservation Day
-
Salzburg, Austria
-
Happy Thanksgiving!
-
Telašćica Nature Park, Dugi Otok, Croatia
-
Green is the new black
-
A light on National Hispanic Heritage Month
-
Iguazu Falls at the border of Argentina and Brazil
-
Naxos in the Cyclades Islands of Greece
-
Arches National Park anniversary
-
Seonam Temple, South Korea
-
Bardenas Reales Biosphere Reserve and Natural Park, Spain
-
Stepping into autumn
-
Bungle Bungle Range in Purnululu National Park, Australia
-
Shark Awareness Day
-
World Sea Turtle Day
-
Río Negro, Amazon basin, Brazil
-
World Book Day
-
Road to Sa Calobra, Majorca, Spain
-
Poinsettia Day
-
Corjuem Fort in Goa, India
-
In the valley of the doll
-
Blue paradise on the Costa Brava
-
Andean cocks-of-the-rock, Ecuador
-
Remembering Krakatoa
-
Göreme, Cappadocia, Turkey
-
A garden of prickly delights
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

