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  • Fallen autumn leaves are partially submerged in the shallow water of Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Yesler-Swamp_Decaying-Leaves_5255.jpg
  • Fallen autumn leaves are partially submerged in the shallow water of Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Yesler-Swamp_Decaying-Leaves_5201.jpg
  • Fallen autumn leaves are partially submerged in the shallow water of Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Yesler-Swamp_Decaying-Leaves_5163.jpg
  • A young Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna) watches its sibling exercise its wings at the edge of their nest in Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Nest_Flapping_Yesl...jpg
  • A young Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna) fledgling stretches its wings after landing on a perch in thick brush several feet from the nest it was raised in in Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Fledgling_Yesler-S...jpg
  • Two young Anna's hummingbirds (Calypte anna), which are just over two weeks old, watch for their mother from their nest in Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Nest_Yesler-Swamp_...jpg
  • An Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna) rests on a dead blackberry stalk after foraging in Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington. Nearby, but out of frame, she has a nest of two young hummingbird chicks.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Blackberry-Stalk_Y...jpg
  • An Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna) arrives at her nest to feed her chicks in Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington. The Anna's hummingbird typically raises two or three sets of young, or broods, per year. Each brood usually consists of two chicks.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Nest_Feeding_Yesle...jpg
  • An Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna) feeds one of her babies as the other begs for food in her nest in the Yesler Swamp in Seattle, Washington. The Anna's hummingbird typically raises two or three sets of young, or broods, per year. Each brood usually consists of two chicks.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Nest_Feedgin_Yesle...jpg
  • A young Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna), which had fledged only days earlier, waits in thick brush to be fed by its mother in the Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Fledgling-Mother_Y...jpg
  • A young Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna) exercises its wings as its sibling remains in their nest in Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Nest_Flapping_Yesl...jpg
  • An Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna) sits on the edge of her nest in the Yesler Swamp in Seattle, Washington, as her two young birds beg for food. The Anna's hummingbird typically raises two or three sets of young, or broods, per year.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Nest_Feeding_Yesle...jpg
  • A young Anna's hummingbird (Calypte anna) extends its tongue to catch tiny insects on the back of a leaf while sitting on its nest in Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Nest_Insect_Yesler...jpg
  • A brown creeper (Certhia americana) climbs a mossy tree in Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington.
    Creeper-Brown_Yesler-Swamp_2143.jpg
  • The nest of an Anna's hummingbird sits empty after both of her young fledged in Yesler Swamp, part of the Union Bay Natural Area in Seattle, Washington. Anna's hummingbirds raise two to three broods per year and do not typically reuse nests.
    Hummingbird-Annas_Nest_Empty_Yesler-...jpg
  • A male wood duck (Aix sponsa), called a drake, swims in a channel of the wetlands of the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. Wood ducks typically breed in wooded swamps, shallow lakes, marshes or ponds, and creeks in the eastern United States and along the west coast from Washington state into Mexico.
    WoodDuck_DrakeSwimming_Arboretum_307...jpg
  • A male wood duck (Aix sponsa), called a drake, swims in a channel of the wetlands of the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. Wood ducks typically breed in wooded swamps, shallow lakes, marshes or ponds, and creeks in the eastern United States and along the west coast from Washington state into Mexico. They usually nest in cavities in trees close to water. Unlike most other ducks, the wood duck has sharp claws for perching in trees.
    WoodDuck_DrakeSwimming_Arboretum_115...jpg
  • A female wood duck (Aix sponsa) swims in a channel of the wetlands of the Washington Park Arboretum in Seattle, Washington. Wood ducks typically breed in wooded swamps, shallow lakes, marshes or ponds, and creeks in the eastern United States and along the west coast from Washington state into Mexico. They usually nest in cavities in trees close to water. Unlike most other ducks, the wood duck has sharp claws for perching in trees.
    WoodDuck_FemaleSwimming_Arboretum_31...jpg
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