The red-necked grebe has a bit of a split personality—in fact, it only lives up to its name about half the year. Its feathers are not red but brambly brown and gray throughout the winter, when it lives a low-key, quiet life in salt water along North American and European coasts. But just before it migrates to a northerly lake, pond, or swamp for breeding season, the plumage around the grebe"s throat turns a distinctive rust-red. Both males and females undergo the plumage change.
Red-necked grebes during breeding season
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
International Rock Day
-
Perseid meteor shower over Oregon
-
Lobster tales
-
Thomas Edison s bright idea
-
World Whale Day
-
It’s Art Deco Weekend in Miami
-
World Rainforest Day
-
Sligachan Old Bridge, Isle of Skye, Scotland
-
Red squirrel in Cairngorms National Park, Scotland
-
Mildred B. Cooper Memorial Chapel in Arkansas
-
Weaverbird nests at Kenya’s Samburu National Reserve
-
Italy s submerged village
-
Playa del Amor, Marietas Islands, Mexico
-
Fly me to the moon
-
Ready, set, read
-
Fight for your lefts
-
Nha Phu Bay, Nha Trang, Vietnam
-
European hedgehog in Sussex, England
-
The Battle of the Bulge 75 years later
-
Point Reyes National Seashore, California
-
A bridge that rocks
-
International Archaeology Day
-
Celebrating the Acadians
-
Es Vedrà and Es Vedranell, Ibiza, Spain
-
The otherworldly red river
-
Mooncake time
-
Collared aracari in Costa Rica
-
Is that a buzzing sound?
-
Exploring the wilder side of New York
-
Happy Presidents Day
Bing Wallpaper Gallery


