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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Halemaumau Crater, Hawaii Volcanoes National Park
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Chapel of St. Michel on Lake Serre-Ponçon, Hautes-Alpes, France
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Mont-Saint-Michel, Normandy, France
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Adorably evolutionary sea sheep
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Perseid meteor shower over Oregon
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Aqueduct, Arkadia Park, Poland
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Road to Hana, Maui, Hawaii
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World Water Day
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Polar bears
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Can you see the family resemblance?
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A different kind of dive
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A march toward a dream
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Arches National Park, Utah
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Château de Sully-sur-Loire, Center-Val de Loire, France
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Corkscrew Swamp Sanctuary
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Milwaukee City Hall, Wisconsin
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A garden of prickly delights
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Diwali lights in Guwahati, India
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Birds of a feather
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A glittering diamond in the rough
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Tulips, Netherlands
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Bear cubs roughhouse on Siblings Day
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Kings of the Kalahari
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Gauchos showcase Argentina’s independent spirit
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A new park with a new mission
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National Napping Day
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A holiday beacon of light
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D-Day remembered
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Celebrating Indigenous Peoples Day
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A star blows a bubble
Bing Wallpaper Gallery

