Woodpecker Meets Magpie Gang
More Magpie, Woodpecker, Shenanigans
Magpies Chilling
Magpie baby on the roof top
IMG 9484 Magpie
Juvenile Magpie
Juvenile Magpie
Juvenile Magpie
HWW Magpie Mine Sheldon Derbyshire 11th January 20…
Magpie with a Peanut
Scavenging Magpie on the hunt
183/366 at dusk
Australian Magpie
.
Magpie stealing the Pine Marten's breakfast!
Magpie stealing the Pine Marten's breakfast!
Magpie stealing the Pine Marten's breakfast!
in the rain
Magpie juvenile
Diving Magpie!!
majestic
Magpies, Wood Ducks and a (Greater?) Yellowlegs
Magpie narrowboat
Blue Tit
Good Reception
Magpies
Blue Tit
Black-billed Magpie
Australian Magpie
Young Aussie Magpie
Magpie
When the light catches
The Onlooker - 18 November 2013
Iridescent beauty
Magpie Perched
A magical moment
Black-billed Magpie
Elster
Black-billed Magpie
See also...
Keywords
A Yellow billed Magpie
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magpie
For a long time people could not believe that the magpies had once lived all the way from the shores of the eastern Atlantic to those of the western Pacific and so they came up with the theory that it had been the sixteenth-century Portuguese mariners who had brought the multicoloured birds back as pet. Some escaped and colonized south-Western Iberia. That seemed fine until we discovered the remains of this bird in caves that had been occupied by Neanderthals in Gibraltar around 40 thousand years ago. If they had lived in south-western Iberia then, one could no longer argue for the human-assisted introduction in historical times. ` Page 51 (From ‘The Humans Who Went Extinct’ Author Clive Finlayson
For a long time people could not believe that the magpies had once lived all the way from the shores of the eastern Atlantic to those of the western Pacific and so they came up with the theory that it had been the sixteenth-century Portuguese mariners who had brought the multicoloured birds back as pet. Some escaped and colonized south-Western Iberia. That seemed fine until we discovered the remains of this bird in caves that had been occupied by Neanderthals in Gibraltar around 40 thousand years ago. If they had lived in south-western Iberia then, one could no longer argue for the human-assisted introduction in historical times. ` Page 51 (From ‘The Humans Who Went Extinct’ Author Clive Finlayson
Andrea Ertl, Thérèse have particularly liked this photo
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