Description
A Peregrine Falcon comes out of nowhere and arrives on the scene. The scene is thousands of semipalmated sandpipers. The raptor's m mission is to cull one out the flock. Despite the Peregine's impressive speed, it is not an easy task. Their shorebird prey have a ton of tricks up their wing sleeves and are always up to the task being chased. For example, sandpipers can angle/turn much sharper than a falcon analagous to sports car vs an 18-wheeler -and that can make or break an attack. Also, notice in the image that one sandpiper's wing is protruding from the ocean. It has not been struck but has performed a ditch. Ditching is a tactic that is used when the falcon is too close for comfort and death imminent - so they cut their forward motion and plunge into the water - allowing their predator to overshoot them ... and then escape in the other direction.
Taken By
Derek Grant
Taken On
September 21, 2024
Tagged
raptors
predation
shorebirds
sandpipers
wings
falconry
bird
falconidae
falco
peregrinus
animal
flying
accipiter
kite_bird
buzzard
hawk
water
accipitridae
falcon
body_of_water
falconiformes
beak
-
Focal:
220
-
Lens Model:
200.0-500.0 mm f/5.6
-
Shutter speed:
0.000125
sec
-
Aperture: f/
6.3