Common cranes (aka Eurasian cranes) often gravitate to wet open fields, bogs, and marshes. This flock is congregating in the Drömling wetland in Germany. The most widely distributed of all the 15 species of cranes, its native range covers a wide swath of Europe and Asia, with the largest breeding populations in Russia and Scandinavia. As winter approaches, common cranes make the long journey south, often in large flocks of about 400 birds, to North Africa or parts of southern Europe and Asia in search of more civilized temperatures.
Birds of the Drömling
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
-
Canada s $20 view
-
World Bee Day
-
Humming along
-
Wychwood Forest, Oxfordshire, England
-
Art over Amalfi
-
Celebrating World Wildlife Day
-
International Tiger Day
-
Lion cubs, South Africa
-
Autumn in the cypress swamp
-
International Rock Day
-
A bird of beauty
-
The Big Blue of the Sierra
-
Old Rock Day
-
Mute swans
-
How Quảng Ngãi got its grove back
-
Apple trees in spring, Germany
-
Bangkok, Thailand
-
An underwater rainbow
-
Earth seen from the International Space Station
-
Siblings Day
-
Martin Luther King Jr. Day
-
Christmas comes to New York City
-
The artists come to Venice
-
Come out of your shell for World Turtle Day
-
An emerald isle of the Emerald Isle
-
A peek behind the royal curtain
-
Infant Sumatran orangutan, Indonesia
-
Fat Bear Week
-
Last stop before leaving the solar system
-
The Grand Départ: Tour de France begins