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Robert | all galleries >> Nature Galleries >> Exotic Birds - Digital Photography > Carmine Bee-eaters
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10-JAN-2004 Copyright © 2005 Robert

Carmine Bee-eaters

Jurong Birdpark, Singapore

Scientifc name: Merops nubicus (JF Gmelin 1788).

The carmine bee-eater's habitat is wooded savannas, grassy plains, swamps, lakeshores and mangrove forests from Senegal to Somalia. Southern species breed in Zambia, Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Botswana.
Moves into South Africa after breeding. Carmine Bee-eaters inhabit a belt of country from Senegal in the west to Abyssinia and Somalia in the east. During non-breeding seasons they migrate south to Kenya, Zaire, and Tanzania. The Bee-eater family is believed to have arisen in Southeast Asia rain forests and spread to Africa.

Carmine bee-eaters feed as they fly, sometimes soaring above 300 feet. The northern species ride on the backs of large mammals catching insects flushed into the open. Also, they fly beside vehicles
and herds and are attracted to brushfires, all opportunities to seize escaping insects.

Books: Kingfishers, Bee-Eaters, & Rollers: A Handbook.

Canon EOS 10D ,Canon EF 70-200mm f/2.8L IS USM
1/200s f/9.0 at 185.0mm iso400 with flash (1.4TC)
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Full EXIF Info
Date/Time10-Jan-2004 11:37:57
MakeCanon
ModelEOS 10D
Flash UsedYes
Focal Length185 mm
Exposure Time1/200 sec
Aperturef/9
ISO Equivalent400
Exposure Bias-0.67
White Balance (-1)
Metering Modematrix (5)
JPEG Quality (6)
Exposure Program
Focus Distance

other sizes: small medium original auto
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Mike Pope 06-Oct-2004 13:16
A stunning well saturated image. I am in the process of making the transition from 35mm to digital and have ordered the Canon EOS 20D. There is a lot for me to learn and I would appreciate any input from the photographer on how he set-up the parameters on his EOS 10D to get such great colour and impact.

Cheers
Mike Pope