After the nesting and breeding seasons of spring and summer have passed, starlings become highly social birds, often gathering in flocks that number in the thousands. These flocks sometimes take the form of a murmuration—when the birds form a group large and dense enough that they appear to move together as a single organism, even if the movements seem arbitrary. Though scientists still don"t quite understand how the individual starlings in a murmuration coordinate their tight, fluid formations, the behavior is thought to be a way to confuse predators.
Moving as one
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Male kori bustard, Maasai Mara National Reserve, Kenya
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Penguin Awareness Day
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Hiding in plain sight
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Rideau Canal Skateway in Ottawa, Canada
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Take the Stairs Day
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Gamboa Crater, Mars
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Bear cubs roughhouse on Siblings Day
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Molokini Crater, Maui, Hawaii
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Celebrating the Day of the Dead
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Beaver achievers
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International Jazz Day
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Mid-Autumn Festival
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Stuben am Arlberg, Austria
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So, how long till springtime?
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National Park Week continues
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A legend and a legendary home
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Sleep tight, little hedgehog
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Nuwara Eliya, Sri Lanka
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National Hispanic Heritage Month
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International Cheetah Day
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Summer solstice
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Ambassadors of the airwaves
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Vasco da Gama Bridge, Lisbon, Portugal
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A viewer with a view
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Przewalskis horses, Hustai National Park, Mongolia
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The Cathedral of Florence, Italy
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World Space Week begins
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World Book Day
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International Talk Like a Pirate Day
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It’s Penguin Awareness Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery


