The red-necked grebe has a bit of a split personality—in fact, it only lives up to its name about half the year. Its feathers are not red but brambly brown and gray throughout the winter, when it lives a low-key, quiet life in salt water along North American and European coasts. But just before it migrates to a northerly lake, pond, or swamp for breeding season, the plumage around the grebe"s throat turns a distinctive rust-red. Both males and females undergo the plumage change.
Red-necked grebes during breeding season
Today in History
More Desktop Wallpapers:
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Super sandy Sweet 16
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Ancient theater of Epidaurus, Greece
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World Environment Day
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A cutting-edge art gallery opens in Paris
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Happy Syttende Mai!
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Too awesome to be a planet
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Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness
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Point Reyes National Seashore in California
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Kelimutu, Flores, Indonesia
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Labor Day parade in 1915 Chicago
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Happy Father s Day
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Illuminations on the Gulf of Poets
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The tallest animal in the world on the longest day of the year
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Look before you leap
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Golling Waterfall, Salzburg, Austria
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Waiānapanapa State Park, Maui, Hawaii
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Veterans Day
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Happy Thanksgiving
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International Day of the Tropics
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A shell of many colors
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Storseisundet Bridge, Norway
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Seattle Central Library, Seattle, Washington
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Anniversary of the Endangered Species Act of 1973
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Gamboa Crater, Mars
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To the 155th on the 155th
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New York City skyline
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Mount Sopris, Colorado
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National Hummingbird Day
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Modica, Sicily, Italy
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Tulips, Netherlands
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

