This time of year, from late spring to summer, male adult indigo buntings take it up a notch and turn a brilliant deep blue. They fly to a high perch—like our cheerful fellow atop a sunflower—and sing from morning to night to try to catch the attention of females. Indigo buntings are members of the "blue" clade (subgroup) of the cardinal family. During breeding season, you"ll find the small, seed-loving songbirds in brushy habitats in pastures, along roadways, and at the edges of forests throughout eastern and central North America, from southern Canada down to Florida. But you"ll have to keep a sharp eye out for the plain brown females, who are usually tending to their young deep in the thicket.
Dressed to impress
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Madame Sherri Forest, New Hampshire
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A medieval celebration in the Mediterranean
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World Water Day
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Sami lavvu structures, Finnmark, Norway
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Boating on the Bojo
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A duckling swimming in a water meadow, Suffolk, England
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Of balloons and lost pantaloons
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Spine-cheeked anemonefish in Milne Bay, Papua New Guinea
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Arambol Beach, Goa, India
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Infrared Jupiter, erupting Io
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Brown-throated three-toed sloth in cecropia tree, Costa Rica
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Palouse farmland, Washington state
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Looking down upon Edinburgh
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World Teachers Day
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How lovely are your branches
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Polar bear capital of the world
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A river on the tundra
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Halo around the sun
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Fall comes to the Last Frontier
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Whitehaven Beach, Whitsunday Island, Australia
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In the Supertree Grove
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Wedded Rocks, Japan
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Celebrating sea otters
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Party like it’s 5779
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Everglades National Park, Florida
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Tough turf
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Breaking the fast for Eid
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Veterans Day
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A memorial in Germany
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Gulf Islands National Seashore, Florida
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

