Along the rocky coasts of the North Atlantic, Atlantic puffins make their homes in burrows and cliffside crevices. These seabirds, with their black‑and‑white plumage and colourful beaks, are classified by the IUCN as vulnerable, as overfishing and changing ocean conditions reduce the availability of their prey. Each spring, they return to breed, laying a single egg in carefully dug burrows. Remarkable swimmers, they use their wings to "fly" underwater when hunting small fish such as herring and sand eels.
Atlantic puffins, Wales
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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The road less taken?
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Fisgard Lighthouse National Historic Site
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International Womens Day
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The other great barrier reef
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Guild houses of Grand-Place, Brussels, Belgium
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Waitangi Day in New Zealand
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Singing the blues
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Northern gannets, Shetland Islands, Scotland
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Holi celebration in Jaipur, India
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Iguazu Falls at the border of Argentina and Brazil
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A different kind of toucan
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Palmyra Atoll National Wildlife Refuge, Central Pacific Ocean
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Floating mailboxes
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Beauty by the bay
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Happy World Water Day!
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A 50-year balancing act
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Pride and Joy
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An iris garden in Tokyo, Japan
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Town of Pienza in Tuscany, Italy
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A flashy, frigid waterfowl
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Daylight Saving Time
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Zion National Park, Utah, United States
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Among the most photographed in the Rockies
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Huntington Beach Pier, California, USA
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Home of the ‘world’s worst smelling food?’
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Straight out of a fairytale
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Prayer flags in Phobjikha Valley, Bhutan
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African elephants in Namibia
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Eurasian red squirrel, Netherlands
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Majestic lord of the skies
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

