Show your Bird Portraits

First time that I saw and could photograph a dipper (cinclus cinclus) at my local stream.
I know they live at another stream some kilometers away. But haven't been seen here.
The shots were really tricky as I had to crawl into a bush and still had a lot of leaves in front of me.
It was like shooting through a tunnel.
R6m2@500mm, ISO6400, f/7.1, 1/60 (I love image stabilization IS+IBIS) some cropping.
The last one is the second without cropping, so you can see, how tricky it was.

dipper_2023_02.JPGdipper_2023_01.JPGdipper_2023_01_full.JPG
 
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First time (!) this year, that I could get a kingfisher.
In the first quarter, they were just gone - presumably to a lake or stream that was richer in fish.
And until September I saw them a lot. But they were so nervous that I never could get close to any.
Now it seems that breeding is over and they are more relaxed again.
Here's one in the shadows.
R6m2@500mm, f/8, 1/800, ISO6400, I needed cropping and pushing.

kingfisher_2023_01.JPG
 
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Is there any explanation for this sad phenomenon?
From orf.at:

USA: Around 1,000 birds hit windows and died

Around 1,000 birds crashed into the windows of a convention center in Chicago in one night and died. This is an exceptionally high number, several US media reported yesterday (local time).
Highest documented number in the past 40 years

True, such tragedies occur every year, especially during the autumn and spring migration of migratory birds. In the past 40 years, Chicago's Field Museum of Natural History has never documented such a high number, the institution wrote yesterday on Instagram. “It was just frustrating,” bird expert David Willard told the Chicago Tribune newspaper.

“You see a rose-breasted grosgrain that would have made it to the Peruvian Andes if it hadn't flown into a window in Chicago.” He cited, among other things, the illuminated windows of the convention center and unfavorable weather conditions as possible reasons for the incident.

Rain and warm temperatures delayed the migration of the birds, then they all started at the same time, CBS reported. This is also why there were a particularly large number of migratory birds in the area, explained Douglas Stotz from the Field Museum to CBS.
 
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