Gyrfalcons, northern predators.
Photo credit: Andrea Pokrzywinski
Gyrfalcons, northern predators.
Photo credit: Andrea Pokrzywinski
Hello Mr. Fox
Photo credit: Carolina K Smith
A chipmunk prepares for winter.
Photo credit: Peter Ferguson
American beaver with a mouthful.
Photo Credit: Peter Ferguson
Other-worldly coral fungus.
Photo credit: Victor Critch
During the fall migration, harlequin ducks can occasionally be seen along Ontario’s shores.
Photo credit: Peter Gauti
North America’s most northern frog, wood frogs will over-winter under leaves where they freeze and thaw based on the temperature.
Photo credit: Todd W Pierson
Pine siskins resemble goldfinches, but have thinner beaks and streaked plumage.
Photo credit: corvidaceous
Ontario Nature protects wild species and wild spaces through conservation, education and public engagement.
Learn more at: www.ontarionature.org
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Keep an eye out for turtles!!!
(via: North Carolina Aquarium at Pine Knoll Shores)
* pictured is Eastern Box Turtle (T. carolina)
wild blueberries
Great Horned Owl by D J England on Flickr.
Painted turtle
Painted turtle sunning himself on a log in a pond next to the Rideau River, May 2, 20.
Photographe…
Copyright Ontario Nature 2012.