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Posts Tagged "camouflage"

Trycopeptus laciniatus

Posted on Dec 2, 2015

Trycopeptus laciniatus

Are you ready to be blown away by a life form today? Look no further than this! Here’s one of the coolest aliens to inhabit our planet – the mossy phasmid Trycopeptus laciniatus. Come on, isn’t this the most unbelievable creature?! This is beyond camouflage…

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American Bittern

Posted on Nov 24, 2015

American Bittern

This is the American Bittern (Botaurus lentiginosus), a stupendously cryptic and sensationally camouflaged heron species of freshwater and brackish marshes and wetlands. During late fall and winter they can be infrequently found moving south to warmer or coastal areas where the water does not freeze. Even their movements are meant to blend in perfectly to surrounding vegetation, stalking prey including fish, amphibians, insects, mammals, reptiles, and more. The American Bittern was once a terror in the night to many early American settlers who lived in coastal regions. Its pumping, gurgling,...

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Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

Posted on Nov 22, 2015

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker

Oh man, here we go again, another Yellow-bellied Sapsucker (Sphyrapicus varius) looking like bark! This individual is surrounded by wells that it and others of its species have drilled, one of many such trees in an orchard in a town park. This wintering area is obviously a productive spot and when you can look like a tree all day long, even if you’re an occasionally louder than usual tree, no one is going to bother you.

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Snow Buntings

Posted on Nov 18, 2015

Snow Buntings

It is early enough in the avian wintering season that both the earth and the birds – in this case, Snow Buntings (Plectrophenax nivalis) – are brown. We do not have a solid snow cover yet, and it is amazing how well this plumage is designed to help them blend in to the ground. The Snow Bunting camouflage looks like brown grass and, somehow, a rocky, sandy and rough earth, with their wings showing off the darker pattern of what the tundra and short grasslands look like now. Notice how well these birds keep themselves just off the surface even while engaged in feeding, hiding their...

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Field Sparrow

Posted on Nov 16, 2015

Field Sparrow

Why do they call them Field Sparrows again? Oh, right. Way to blend in! It appears to be simply a more mobile assemblage of some brown blades of grass…late sparrow migrants are still on the move, so keep an eye out for them along with Vesper Sparrows and all those Dark-eyed Juncos and White-throated Sparrows.

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