Oscar Dewhurst – Hoopoe

  Oscar writes: Sorry for the lack of photos on here for the last 3 months – I’ve just finished my university finals so have been focused on those, but they finished a couple of weeks ago so I’ve got a while off until I start my Master’s in October so should have some time…

Tim Melling – Rufous Hummingbird

Tim writes: Rufous Hummingbirds are a western North American bird and breed further north than any other species of Hummingbird.  This one is a male showing off his iridescent throat which is created by interference colours not pigment (like rainbows or oil in a puddle).  I photographed him very early morning in a dark forest…

Tim Melling – Barrow’s Goldeneye

Tim writes:  Iceland is the only breeding site for Barrow’s Goldeneye outside of North America.  I photographed this flying male in Alaska where it was common.  It was named in honour of Sir John Barrow from the Admiralty who sponsored many Arctic expeditions during the nineteenth century.    Barrow’s Goldeneye differs from Common Goldeneye by the…

Tim Melling – Ethiopian Wolf

Ethiopian Wolves (Canis simensis) are the rarest Canid on the planet with a population of around just five hundred individuals.  Most of these are found in the Bale Mountains but a second population occurs further north in the Simien Mountains.  Interbreeding with feral dogs  is one problem, but they have also caught rabies and distemper…

Tim Melling – Duke of Burgundy

Tim writes: Apart from being the sole European representative of a tropical family of butterflies, Duke of Burgundy has another unusual attribute.  Males and females have a different number of legs.  Everyone knows that all insects have six legs, but sometimes they are reduced to become vestigial appendages, hardly visible at all.  This is exactly…

Tim Melling – Lammergeier

Tim writes: Also known as the Bearded Vulture, the Lammergeier is the only animal on the planet known to feed almost exclusively on bones.  It has an extremely acidic stomach (with a pH of around 1) that can dissolve bones and the high fat content marrow inside.  Even the young nestlings are fed on small…

Tim Melling – Lanner

Lanner Falcons are scarce breeding birds in Europe but they are more numerous in sub-Saharan Africa.  So it was a species I was hoping to see and photograph in Ethiopia but I got better than I could have hoped for.  This male was flying round at eye-level in the morning sunshine with steep nesting cliffs…

Tim Melling – White-headed Vulture

This is the White-headed Vulture (Trigonoceps occipitalis) which is rare and declining throughout its range.  It has been classified as critically endangered by IUCN, which is the highest category before extinction in the wild.  Although it is widespread in sub-Saharan Africa it is always scarce and at low density. Being a vulture it feeds on…

Tim Melling – Yellowhammer

The song of the Yellowhammer is supposed to sound like “a little bit of bread and no cheese”.   It was Enid Blyton who popularised this rendition of the song in several of her books and poems (eg The Yellowhammer Bird in Enid Blyton’s Nature Lover’s Handbook 1944).  This is another seriously depleted farmland bird that…

Tim Melling – Adder

Getting an Adder moving towards you takes a bit of patience as they’ll usually head for cover when humans approach.  Most people photograph them early morning when they are torpid and usually coiled, while trying to warm up.  I was on Thorne Moors in South Yorkshire when I came across five adders all basking in…