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 colorful 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:
-
Penguins can t fly!
-
At the foot of Dubrovnik s Gibraltar
-
Mardi Gras flower power
-
Sea Otter Awareness Week
-
Avatars of the Wolf Moon
-
Take the stairs
-
Arromanches-les-Bains for the 81st anniversary of D-Day
-
Vinh Hy Bay, Vietnam
-
75th anniversary of the Spruce Goose
-
Sydney Harbour, New South Wales, Australia
-
Travels to the Oregon deep
-
North Sea at sunset, Norddorf, Germany
-
Frost-covered dunes on Mars
-
A personal collection becomes an institution
-
Mont-Saint-Michel
-
Tafilalet oasis in Morocco
-
The Cathedral of Florence, Italy
-
World Population Day
-
The Cordillera de la Sal in the Cordillera Domeyko Range of Chile
-
Boxing Day—a shopper’s delight
-
Rumelihisarı in Istanbul, Türkiye
-
Happy Valentines Day!
-
Field of Light at Sensorio by Bruce Munro
-
Memorial Day
-
International Day of Human Space Flight
-
Road to Hana, Maui, Hawaii
-
Honoring our veterans
-
New Year s Day
-
Okefenokee Swamp
-
Sea lion in a kelp forest, Baja California, Mexico
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

