William H. Wiley
402-875-1809
bill@wmwiley.com
1221 Rockhurst Dr.
Lincoln, NE 68510
The Yellow Warbler breeds from Alaska east across Canada to Newfoundland and south to southern California, northern Oklahoma, and northern Georgia. It spends winters in southern Florida and the tropics. Preferred habitats include the edges of marshes and swamps, willow-lined steams, leafy bogs, thickets, orchards, forest edges and suburban yards and gardens. This picture was taken in central Minnesota.
As America’s national wildlife symbol, the bald eagle is an immediately recognizable raptor with a wingspan of 6 to 7 feet. This large eagle was photographed near the Missouri River on a cold winter morning.
An ibis is a wading bird that belongs to the family of ibises and spoonbills. Ibises inhabit salt marshes, swamps, areas near the lakes and rivers, tropical mangroves, forests and marshy mountain meadows where they walk slowly with their heads down probing the muddy surface for insects and crustaceans.