News

Flamingos have developed a unique hunting technique that helps them catch prey more easily by relying on their beaks and feet ...
The researchers discovered that the popular pink birds stir up sediment with their webbed, floppy feet, generating spinning ...
The repeated evolution of huge birds is part of the dinosaurian legacy. Beaked birds were the only dinosaurs to have survived ...
Work to replace electricity supply poles near a bird of prey centre could disrupt nesting birds during breeding season, its ...
Flamingos standing serenely in a shallow alkaline lake with heads submerged may seem to be placidly feeding, but there's a lot going on under the ...
Curious and patient, chatterboxes and fitness freaks, lazy parents and troublemakers. Isn’t it time to make a case for ...
Native to Eastern Europe and Central Asia, red-footed falcons are extremely rare visitors to the UK and have been declared ...
Flamingos use swirling water and rapid beak clapping to hunt prey. Learn how this surprising behavior could inspire new ...
“The birds can go in and out. And they chose to come there.” ...
Masters of fluid dynamics, the pink birds use everything from the shape of their feet to the chattering of their bills to vastly increase the number of shrimp they can catch.
A UNEP project is supporting conservation and awareness of biodiversity in Istanbul, Turkey, by highlighting its position on ...