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Three-banded plover's art of gliding
Whereas most Northern hemisphere plovers tend to move in run-stop-start staccatos along shorelines, the African three-banded plover (Charadrius tricollaris) likes to skim, wade and glide along waterhole ponds foraging for food. To capture the graceful gliding step of this three-banded plover, the photographer had to lie prone with his elbows stuck in the mud for a steady prop. This image was shot in the Selinda game reserve, in the Okavango Delta, Botswana.
Digital image ID: Philippe_Rouquet_20160412_001227
Created: April 12, 2016
Author: Philippe Rouquet
© Philippe Rouquet
File state: Final
Digital image size: 10.6 Mpixels (30.5 MB uncompressed) - 4000x2662 pixels (13.3x8.8 in / 33.9x22.5 cm at 300 ppi)
Digital image keywords: art of gliding, Behavior, Birds, Botswana, Charadriidae, Charadrius tricollaris, Ciconiiformes, gliding, Okavango Delta, Plovers, Ringed Plovers, Selinda Game Reserve, Three-banded Plover
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