- Japanese Birds
- On the Watch
Bird watching a butterfly - Osprey and Grakles
Osprey landing in its nest with food for its young - The Two White Birds
The Two storks - Brown Cachalote
Brown Cachalote - Chat-like Tyrant
Chat-like Tyrant - Mother hen with her chicks
Mother hen with her chicks - Birds waiting for feeding time
Birds waiting for feeding time - Owl catching a rabbit
- The Pursuit
Birds chasing insects - Australian Goshawk
Astur approximans The Australian Goshawk is a bold, powerful, and most sanguinary species, feeding upon birds, reptiles, and small quadrupeds. It may often be seen lurking about the poultry-yard of the settler, and dealing destruction among the young stock of every kind; daring when at large, and morose and sullen when captured, it never becomes tame and familiar like the true Falcons, but retains its ferocity to the last. - Raven
Raven - Kestrel
- Owl
- Sparrowhawk Vulture
- Cow-bird
Cow-bird - Woodpecker drilling a hole for a nest
The woodpeckers are carpenters; they not only bore holes in trees in search of food, but they also chisel out deep holes in which to deposit their eggs and rear their young. They generally build their nest in May, selecting an old apple tree in the orchard; the boring is first done by the male, who pecks out a circular hole; as the work progresses, he is occasionally relieved by the female. They both work with great diligence, and as the hole deepens they carry out the chips, sometimes taking them some distance to prevent discovery or suspicion. The nest usually requires a week to build, and when the female is quite satisfied she deposits her eggs, generally six in number and of a pure white color. - Marabou
- The King or Imperial Eagle
- Great Egret
- Cormorant
- Slobe duck
- Sparrowhawk
- Spur-winged goose
- Painted Stork
- Carolina duck
- Bald-headed Vulture
- Nests of the Bottle bird
Nests of the Bottle bird - King Vulture
- A Clever Humming-bird
- Pelican
- Stork
- Great Merganser
- African Snake-necked bird
- Crested eagle
- Flamingo
- Black Swan
- Turkey Vulture
- Secretary
- Kondor
- Mallard
- The Red-footed Falcon
- Black-brown Kite
- Shoebill
- Frigate bird
- White-tailed Eagles
- Short-toed Snake Eagle
- Hawk
- Bittern
- Wild Swan
- Brown Chick Thief
- Tropicbird
- Nests of Social Weavers
The social weaver is found in the south of Africa. Hundreds of these birds, in one community, join to form a structure of interwoven grass containing various apartments, all covered by a sloping roof impenetrable to the heaviest rain, and increased year after year as the population of the little community may require. - Barfighting eagle
- Wasp thief
- Red-breasted Plant-cutter
Red-breasted Plant-cutter - Spoonbill
- Many-coloured Ground Finch
Many-coloured Ground Finch - Bridges’s Wood-Hewer
Bridges’s Wood-Hewer - Holy Ibis