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:
-
Let the games begin
-
Leopard at Etosha National Park, Namibia
-
National Hummingbird Day
-
Groundhog Day
-
Beaver achievers
-
Bláhver, Hveravellir, Iceland
-
Rays on parade
-
A young bull moose in Denali National Park, Alaska
-
Montreux, Switzerland, and all that jazz
-
Beech trees and wild anemones, Jutland, Denmark
-
Colle Santa Lucia, Dolomites, Italy
-
Petrified Forest National Park
-
International Day for Biological Diversity
-
Christmas Bird Count turns 125
-
Art in the chapel
-
You won’t see this on Mulberry Street
-
World Oceans Day
-
An icy extravaganza
-
Longer days mean warmer sand
-
Happy International Zebra Day!
-
Methoni Castle, Messenia, Greece
-
It’s National Walk to Work Day
-
Vatican City with St. Peters Basilica
-
‘Hello’ from zero degrees longitude
-
International Tiger Day
-
St. Paul Winter Carnival
-
Madame Sherri Forest, New Hampshire
-
Mountain goats
-
Friendship Day
-
Serra de Tramuntana, Majorca, Spain
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

