Eagles

Top 25 Wild Bird Photographs of the Week

The Wild Bird Revolution by Steve Boyes is about sharing awesome images of wild birds from all over the world with the people of the world! Their mission is to build a global community around the freedom and beauty of birds in the wild as ambassadors for the natural ecosystems that they depend upon.

The Wild Bird Revolution aims to publish the “Top 25 Wild Bird Photographs of the Week” to 1 million people every week. That is a revolution that will change the world!

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Steve Boyes is a Fellow of the National Geographic Society and a 2013 National Geographic Emerging Explorer for his work in the Okavango Delta and on the Cape Parrot Project. He has dedicated his life to conserving Africa’s wilderness areas and the species that depend upon them. After having worked as a camp manager and wilderness guide in the Okavango Delta and doing his PhD field work on the little-known Meyer’s Parrot, Steve took up a position as a Centre of Excellence Postdoctoral Fellow at the Percy FitzPatrick Institute of African Ornithology. In 2019 Steve and the National Geographic Okavango Wilderness Project won the Rolex Explorer of the year

Eagles

Eagles are large, powerfully built birds of prey, with heavy heads and beaks. They have relatively longer and more evenly broad wings, and more direct, fast flight. Most eagles are larger than any other raptors apart from some vultures. Because of their size and power, many eagle species are ranked at the top of the food chain as apex predators in the avian world.

Featured here are the Steller’s Sea Eagle and the White-tailed Eagle found on the drift ice off the coast of Rausu, Hokkaido in the sea of Okhotsk.

Photographed: Feb 27, 2020 | Published: March 13, 2020.

The Steller’s Sea Eagle is a large diurnal bird of prey found in coastal northeastern Asia and mainly preys on fish and water birds. Photo taken at Sea of Okhotsk, Rausu, Hokkaido (Siddhartha Mukherjee)

The White-tailed Eagle is a large species of sea eagles found widely distributed across the temperate Eurasia. Photographed on the drift ice near Rausu in Hokkaido, Japan (Siddhartha Mukherjee)

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