Greater flamingos, Lüderitz, Namibia
© Karine Aigner/TANDEM Stills + Motio
Greater flamingos
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 1.5 metres 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
Australian Christmas sandman on a white sand
For Canada Day, canoers in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada
Siberian Snowkiting Cup in Novosibirsk, Russia
Bass Rock in Scotland’s Firth of Forth
The shoreline of Cahuita National Park, in Costa Rica
Ashdown Forest, Misty Sunrise, East Sussex, United Kingdom
Sunrise over the Matilda Bay boathouse in the Swan River, Perth
Arctic surfing trip in the Lofoten Islands, Norway for the Lofoten Masters