Dinner.
We saw a least bittern while out on the pontoon boat.
While we were watching he grabbed a bite to eat.
Taken at 1/800 of a second. This bird is fast.
The hunt.
The strike.
The catch.
Flossing after the meal.
Rondeau Provincial Park, July 15, 2022
Ixobrychus exilis.
Perhaps surprisingly, tiny Least Bitterns use areas with deeper water than the much larger, longer-legged American Bittern. Least Bitterns can do this because their long, agile toes and curved claws allow them to grasp reeds and hunt small prey while suspended from these precarious over-water perches.
source- Cornell Lab of Ornothology.
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