wildlife art
Chestnut-Backed Chickadee – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the Chestnut-Backed Chickadee:
The Chestnut-Backed Chickadee is a small passerine bird native to the low elevation coniferous and mixed coniferous/deciduous forests. It is also commonly seen in backyards at birdfeeders. They can be found from Alaska in the north, all the way through much of the Pacific Coast to southwestern California. They are small - even for a chickadee - only 4.5–4.9 inches long (11.5–12.5 cm) weighing about 0.30–0.44 ounces (8.5–12.6 g.) They will eat insects and other small invertebrates found in the foliage, as well as seeds, fruits and will readily eat food offered at birdfeeders, and are especially drawn to suet. The scientific name changed from "Parus rufescens" to "Poecile rufescens" representing the belief that the bird is it's own specific genus. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Cerulean Warbler – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the Cerulean Warbler:
The Cerulean Warbler is a small New World songbird of the treetops of deciduous forests of North America, while it winters in South America. It feeds primarily on insects it gleans from the leaves of trees and bushes. This Warbler is one of the species of highest concern in the eastern United States because of it's small total population size and significant declines throughout its range. It is under consideration for listing under the Endangered Species Act. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Cedar Waxwing – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the Cedar Waxwing:
The Cedar Waxwing is a medium sized passerine bird and a member of the Bombycillidae (waxwing) family. They are native to open forests, orchards, urban and suburban areas of North and Central America, usually not too ar from water. They feed on berries or sugary fruit, and on insects especially during the breeding season. They are very social birds with flocks sometime numbering in the hundreds. They will land in an area with fruiting trees and pause to have their fill before moving on. They will return to the same areas over and over as long as the trees are supplying food. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Carolina Wren – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the Carolina Wren:
The Carolina Wren is a Passerine bird common to the forests, swamps and meadows of the Southeastern parts of the United States. As far as wrens go, it is one of the larger ones - about 6-7 inches long (14 cm) Noted much for it's song, the Carolina Wren's call is thought to sound like "teakettle-teakettle-teakettle", which is very different from the other wrens. This songbird is very susceptible to long periods of cold weather, and often after long and frigid winters, the population will drop. However, this is usually corrected by the birds high productivity in the following years. The Carolina Wren is the state bird of South Carolina. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Sandhill Crane – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the Sandhill Crane:
The Sandhill Crane is a large bird native to North America and small areas of Siberia. Their common name comes from the habitat found in areas like the Platte River, which is an important stopover during their migration. They are very large birds with a wingspan of 6-8 feet. They are able to soar and use thermals in the way that birds of prey such as hawks do. This maximizes their flight distance and minimizes the effort and energy spent. These birds prefer open marshes, bogs and wetlands to feed and breed. They eat mostly grains and seeds, but will also feed on insect, small invertebrates and vertebrates. Like other large birds, the Sandhill Crane will fly south for the winter. During this time flocks of them can number in the tens of thousands. At the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, which is about 100 miles south of Albuquerque, New Mexico is one of the best places to view the large flocks. There is an annual Sandhill Crane Festival in November. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
California Towhee – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the California Towhee:
The California Towhee - Pipilo crissalis or Melozone crissalis - is a small bird and member of the Emberizidae family. It is native to the coastal regions of the western parts of North America, from Oregon through California down into Baja, Mexico. The bird is normally found in brushlands or chaparral. It is also very commonly seen in yards in cities and urban environments, usually on the ground searching through the leaf litter for food. It is an opportunistic feed, and will eat both insects and seeds. Because of their dull coloring - warm grays with subtle splashes of orange and red-orange - it is often overlooked by birdwatchers. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
California Thrasher – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the California Thrasher:
The California Thrasher is a large songbird native to the chaparral habitats in California and Baja California. It will breed in adjacent oak woodlands and pine-juniper scrub as well as occasionally in parks and gardens, but only if dense cover is available. Similar to the Crissal and Le Conte's Thrashers in habit, the California Thrasher is the only species of Toxostoma throughout most of its limited range. Like other similar species this bird would rather stay hidden in the underbrush then fly into the open. Because of this it is not often see in it's native range. At about 12 inches (30 cm) and nearly 85 grams (3.0 oz), the California Thrasher is the largest species of mimid. The California Thrasher feed on small invertebrates like worms, beetles and other insects. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Ruddy Turnstone – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the Ruddy Turnstone:
The Ruddy Turnstone is a wading bird native to much of the Northern Hemisphere. It can survive in a wide range of habitats and climatic conditions from Arctic to tropical. The typical breeding habitat is open tundra with water nearby. Outside the breeding season, it is found along coasts, particularly on rocky or stony shores. It is often found on man-made structures such as breakwaters and jetties. It may venture onto open grassy areas near the coast. Small numbers sometimes turn up on inland wetlands, especially during the spring and autumn migrations.It is a fairly small and stocky bird, 22–24 cm (8.7–9.4 in) long with a wingspan of 50–57 cm (20–22 in) and a weight of 85–150 g (3.0–5.3 oz). The dark, wedge-shaped bill is 2–2.5 cm (0.79–0.98 in) long and slightly upturned. The legs are fairly short at 3.5 cm (1.4 in) and are bright orange. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Purple Heron – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the Purple Heron:
The Purple Heron is a large wading bird, growing to be about 31-38 inches long (78–97 cm) with a standing height from 28-37 inches (70 to 94 cm) and a wingspan of 47-60 inches (120–152 cm) However, it is slender for its size, weighing only 1.2-3 pounds (0.5–1.35 kg) They are members of the family Ardeidae. They breed in Africa, central and southern Europe, and southern and eastern Asia. The European populations are migratory, wintering in tropical Africa; the more northerly Asian populations also migrate further south within Asia. It is a rare but regular wanderer north of its breeding range. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Marbled Godwit – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the Marbled Godwit:
The Marbled Godwit is a large North American shorebird native to North America from Alaska down south to Mexico. It breeds in the northern prairies of western Canada-(Canadian Prairies), and the north central Great Plains, United States near marshes or ponds. These birds usually nest on the ground in short grass. During the 19th century the number of Marbled Godwits dropped drastically due to overhunting, the numbers rebounded and the bird is not considered endangered. But their numbers have dropped again due to habitat loss. The Marbled Godwit feeds on insects and small crustaceans, usually hunting for them with their long beaks, poking in the shallow water or shoreline. It is the largest of the godwit species, with a wingspan of about 28-35 inches (70-88 cm) The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Magnificent Frigatebird – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the Magnificent Frigatebird:
The Magnificent Frigatebird is a member of the order Suliformes. In the past the bird was sometimes called the Man O'War or Man of War. Which was a reflection on it aerial piracy of other birds. The bird is widespread in the tropical Atlantic, breeding colonially in trees in Florida, the Caribbean and Cape Verde Islands. It also breeds along the Pacific coast of the Americas from Mexico to Ecuador including the Galápagos Islands. The Magnificent Frigatebird is about 40 inches long (100 cm)with an 85 inch wingspan (215 cm). Males are all-black with a scarlet throat pouch that is inflated like a balloon in the breeding season. Females are black, but have a white breast and lower neck sides, a brown band on the wings, and a blue eye-ring that is diagnostic of the female of the species. The Magnificent Frigatebird feeds mainly on fish, and also attacks other seabirds to force them to disgorge their meals. Frigatebirds never land on water, and always take their food items in flight. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page
Long-Billed Curlew – Signed Fine Art Print
Information about the Long-Billed Curlew:
The Long-Billed Curlew - also sometime called the "Sicklebird" or Candlestick Bird - is a species of shorebird native to the central and western parts of North America. They are notable for their very long beak that curves slightly downwards. The beak is used to probe for food in water saturated environments, very commonly at the seashore where the birds will follow the waves in and out and look for food brought in with the seawater, such as small worms, crustaceans and other invertebrates. At one time the bird's numbers were drastically reduced, but over the last few decades they have rebounded, and the population is now stable. Candlestick Point in San Francisco was named after the alternate name of the Long-Billed Curlew. The poster is printed on matte, museum-quality paper with Giclée printing quality: • Paper thickness: 10.3 mil • Paper weight: 5.6 oz/y² (192 g/m²) • Opacity: 94% Buy a Digital Download
Select options
This product has multiple variants. The options may be chosen on the product page