Greater flamingos, Lüderitz, Namibia
© Karine Aigner/TANDEM Stills + Motio
A tidal ballet. Greater flamingos, Lüderitz, Namibia
In Lüderitz, Namibia, these birds aren't just passing through—they're standing their ground. Literally. On one leg. These long-legged locals, the greater flamingos, bring a splash of pink to Namibia's windswept Atlantic coast. These birds are the largest of their kind, and they're not shy about showing off. Towering up to 59 inches tall with spoon-shaped bills and stilt-like legs, they're easy to spot.
That bubblegum pink hue? That's all diet. Flamingos feed on algae, crustaceans, and tiny invertebrates packed with carotenoids—the same pigments that make carrots orange. The more they eat, the pinker they get. In other words, they're what they eat, right down to the blush. In the air, flamingos are sleek flyers, cruising long distances in a V-formation. Their migration habits are still being studied, but it's clear they go where the wetlands flow—from inland salt pans to coastal sanctuaries, always in search of food and safe nesting zones.
Related Images
Bing Today Images
For Waitangi Day, the Pancake Rocks on New Zealand’s South Island
An old farm in the Shetland Islands, Scotland
La Digue, an island in the Seychelles
Siberian Snowkiting Cup in Novosibirsk, Russia
Elephant herd in Damaraland District, Namibia
Hong Kong-Zhuhai-Macau Bridge, China
Shoreline near Tofino on Vancouver Island, British Columbia, Canada
Bioluminescent algae along the shores of the Matsu Islands off the coast of Taiwan