Two osprey chicks
Screencap from webcam Seira, LK forum
Screencap from webcam Seira, LK forum
The roe deer doe may have a fawn hidden nearby.
Photo: Tarmo Mikussaar
Posted by the Animal of the Year Team 09.06.2017
It is the time when on moving around in nature you may come across a spotted roe deer fawn lying on the ground. It is the great secret of the roe deer doe, and it is visited and fed a couple of times a day. Since the fawn has no smell, foxes, dogs and other predators cannot find it. Such a creature must not be caressed, lifted up or taken along. A human-smelling fawn will probably be abandoned. It is sensible to leave quietly the same way as you came. Evidently the worried adult keeps an eye on us from a distance.
Vahur Sepp
Screencap from webcam Riitta, LK forum
Female Irma with the chick, a few hours old
Osprey Kalakotkas Pandion haliaetus
A little past 5 o’clock it happened – the osprey chick was hatched. It may take a couple of days to the next hatching.
Screencap from webcam by Bea, LK forum
Photo Arne Ader
Translation Liis
Hobby inspecting osprey nest
Hobby Lõopistrik Falco subbuteo
Whom more have we seen in the osprey webcam?
News from Linnuvaatleja, www.linnuvaatleja.ee
Translation Liis
While there generally is a consensus on the purpose of bird song – singing is the easiest way of self-promotion and warnings to competitors – the springtime birdsong in early mornings has been explained in several ways. It has for instance been thought that on a calm windless morning when the background rustling is absent the singing reaches further and it is efficient for the birds to warn competitors and attract partners. It has also been proposed that in singing the male birds gobble early morning cool air, because it cools the sexual organs and protects the germ cells from overheating.
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