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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Great cormorants
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National Park Week: Yosemite National Park, California
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National Napping Day
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It’s Siblings Day!
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Independence Day
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Ancient town of Sorano, Tuscany, Italy
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I ll call for pen and ink
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Antarctica Day
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The Canary Islands, Spain
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Arc de Triomphe du Carrousel and the Louvre Pyramid
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International Whale Shark Day
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Roques de Benet, Els Ports Natural Park, Catalonia, Spain
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National Park Week: Wind Cave National Park
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Tolkien Reading Day
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Memorial Day
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Jasper Dark Sky Festival
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A wassailing we go
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There was gold in them there hills…
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Duomo Santa Maria del Fiore, Florence
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Traffic jam on the caribou highway
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A seabird gets schooled
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Great horned owl
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National Frog Month
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Bamburgh Castle, Northumberland, England
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When an ideal microclimate gives you lemons…
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Siblings Day
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Elbphilharmonie concert hall in Hamburg, Germany
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Eben Ice Caves, Upper Peninsula, Michigan
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World Space Week
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Porto Timoni beach, Greece
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

