The diary game: I am capture pics Roseate Spoonbill bird
The Roseate Spoonbill (Platalea ajaja) is a wading bird native to American with pink feather and a spoon-shaped bill. This bird is native to the southern United States, Central and South America, and can be seen in shallow water zones, mangroves and estuaries which are used in fishing for its diet, fish, crustacean and insects.
The Roseate Spoonbill is approximately 80 centimeters in size, and has soft pink feathers, although the deeper shades of pink are denser and deeper with age and diet. It has got a flat bill shaped like a spatula which it uses to scoop through mud and water when hunting and at the same time separated tiny preys from water.
After breeding season, these birds congregate in large flocks in out of the way places generally in tree tops. Some of them include the courtship dances, where birds do a number of tumbling and twisting aerial stunts to impress the female bird. It is a bird that both parents will take equal responsibility in incubation of eggs and feeding of the chicks once hatched.
Some of the easily recognizable and striking features include plumage coloration as well as the peculiar bill of the Roseate Spoonbill. However, habitat destruction and environmental alterations are some of the risks evident, which are why conservations need to persist in beautifying these stunning birds, as well as their environments.