Joke Collection Website - Mood Talk - Talking about shooting wonders in the air

Talking about shooting wonders in the air

The drone observed from the air and saw many strange fruits on the tree. Zoom in, the fruit hanging on the branch is a bird's nest, hanging upside down on the branch.

This is the masterpiece of the weaver bird. This bird is very special. It looks like a sparrow, but it is more beautiful than a sparrow. It is distributed in Africa, Australia and South Asia.

On May 28th, some netizens used drones to shoot a big tree in the air and found a large piece of dense fruit on the tree. Curious, he approached the camera and repeatedly exclaimed. It turns out that that big tree is not a fruit, but a bird's nest. It looks spectacular and unusual. What kind of bird is this?

I specially found a video from the Internet to watch. Oh, it turned out to be a well-known architect-the yellow-breasted weaver bird!

The weaver bird is called the best weaver among birds and even animals. They have built many nests, and the nests they make are always beyond your imagination. They are not only unique in shape, but also extremely strong! Careful friends can easily find that the opening of Weaver Girl's Bird's Nest is downward, which is completely opposite to the opening of other bird's nests. Why is this?

In fact, the bird's nest with a downward opening is only a semi-finished product. With the further construction of the bird's nest, the downward hole will be slowly sealed, and then a small hole will be opened next to it. Since he is the best weaver, the weaver will certainly not be so careless. The bird's nest of the weaver bird is pear-shaped, usually hanging from branches, and woven from grass stems, leaves and willow fibers. People often see many such nests on a tree. People who have never seen it naturally think that this is a kind of bird's nest!

Sometimes the weaver birds who live in groups weave the nest into a huge nest, just like a haystack falling on a tree. There are hundreds of small nests in this giant nest, and each small nest has its own entrance and exit. Only the weaver bird can make such a unique nest in nature!

Weaver birds are mainly distributed in tropical Africa and Asia. They often live in groups and often form dozens or even hundreds of large groups. So, although the weaver bird is small. Their group attack deterrence is still very big. At least some solitary cats are afraid to go to the big tree where the weaver bird is!

Judging from the video circulating on the Internet, this is a lot of weaver birds nesting in a tree. This colorful songbird, which looks like a sparrow, is one of the most talented birds on earth.

They are mainly distributed in warm climates of Africa and Asia, with 58 different species. They are lively and like to live in groups, and dozens or hundreds of them live together at any time. So there are so many nests in a tree in the video that they will nest together in a tree during mating season.

Because they live in a warm climate all the year round and never migrate, this may be the reason why they have cultivated their architectural talent all their lives.

Similar to us, the Bird's Nest is also a necessary condition for them to "get married". When it's mating time, the males will start to nest independently, and the material is the grass nearby. Female birds choose their mates according to the location, design and comfort of the nest.

Our common typical bird's nest is either an upward-opening bird's nest or directly hidden in a tree hole. The Weaver Girl's Nest is different, and its design is much more exquisite than other birds. After all, it is their lifelong love nest, while other birds are only temporary passers-by.

Pictured: Different nests of different weaver birds mostly open downwards.

Most weaver birds' nests are cylindrical and usually have a narrow downward hole, as shown in the video, which helps them to stop predators from attacking because there are too many predators in the tropics.

If you have seen their nests, you will be surprised. Male weaver birds use only their feet and beaks to weave complex structures.

It first tears the grass leaves and other materials into long strips, and then wraps the original thread around the branches.

Then, it began to weave grass intricately to form a hollow shape. Finally, it creates a tubular entrance.

Weaver birds live in many different areas, and each place has different habitats, so the building materials are different. In the video, this group of weaver birds in Thailand are likely to use palm leaves as building materials.

In addition, all kinds of weaver birds build different nests, and those nests that live in groups are the most exquisite.

For example, there is a weaver bird in South Africa. Many couples live in the same big nest (pictured above), just like a tall haystack. The built bird's nest can reach one ton, which is the largest bird building in the world.

A nest is built by more than 100 males at the same time. When they are completed, they will attract the other half to live with them, and sometimes they will attract some males who are not involved in the construction.

But the most surprising thing is that even such a large-scale "apartment" has achieved "single-family". Without a steel structure, they use hay as a baffle for each "wedding room", which other social animals do not have.

Lively weaver birds like to live in groups and nest together during mating season, so there is the effect that a tree photographed by this drone is full of bird nests.

As the saying goes, "the world is big, and there is no wonder." There are still many things in nature that we don't understand. People will be curious when they find something they have never seen before, so they will involuntarily exclaim.

Recently, some netizens accidentally photographed a towering tree full of fruits with drones. Looking from the air, he saw that the tree was full of fruits. Out of curiosity, he wanted to see what kind of fruit it was, so he enlarged it. At this time, he found a strange scene in the tree. What he didn't see was not fruit, but the nest of creatures.

When he zoomed in the camera of the drone, he clearly saw that the so-called fruit on the tree was something that looked like fruit from a distance, and it was an upside-down bird's nest. There are so many bird's nests hanging on the tree, which is so spectacular that this netizen can't help but exclaim that this is a miracle of nature.

It turns out that the bird's nest on this big tree was built by a kind of bird called the weaver bird. The weaver bird looks a bit like a sparrow, but its nesting ability is longer than that of a sparrow. Its nest is unique in shape. Unlike other birds, the weaver bird nests face down at the beginning.

With the later construction of the bird's nest, the lower opening will be blocked, and then an opening will be opened from the side. The nest of a weaver bird hangs on a branch like a pear, and it really looks like a fruit on a tree from a distance.

The weaver bird is small, about 15 cm, with a golden crown on its head. Its small and exquisite mouth is very good at weaving, and it can weave beautiful nests with weeds, leaves and plant fibers, so it is called the weaver bird, not just in name.

Another feature of the weaver bird is that it likes to live in groups. Sometimes dozens or even hundreds of them occupy a big tree, and they will gather on this tree to nest. This kind of social life is also to take care of each other and guard against the enemy.

The weaver birds are mainly distributed in Africa, Australia and South Asia. Its character is lively and active, and it mainly eats insects and mature crops. Its feeding habits are similar to sparrows, and it belongs to neutral birds.

Weaver birds weave bird's nests, which are usually made by males. After the male bird weaves the nest, he will use it as a show-off capital to show off his "new home" to the female bird and let the female bird live with him.

If the nest built by the male bird is not beautiful enough to attract the female bird to stay, the male bird will rebuild the nest and "decorate" the nest, which is really similar to human marriage proposal, using the house as a bargaining chip to attract the opposite sex.

This male bird has a beautiful nest. Once the female bird is attracted, the male and female birds will "get married" in this nest, reproduce and give birth to their own offspring.

There are birds like weaver birds in nature. Not only is its strange and beautiful nest a spectacle, but it also has such a humanized love story, which is simply amazing. It is not difficult to imagine that it will be amazing if someone suddenly finds such a scene.

On May 28th, some netizens saw a group of tourists looking at a towering tree, and the tourists were pointing at the tree.

Netizens feel very curious and use drones to understand what is on the tree.

The drone shot in the air and found something similar to fruit hanging between the branches and leaves, much like the legendary ginseng fruit.

After the netizen lowered the height of the drone, he found out: Where is the fruit of the tree? This is a nest.

What bird can make such a beautiful nest? Only the weaver bird, the architect among birds, can have such skills.

The weaver bird is the general name of the next kind of birds of passeriformes, with about 70 species, which are widely distributed in Asia and Africa.

The weaver bird looks like a sparrow, and the black feathers of the male adult bird are dotted with bright red, orange or yellow. Some species of male weaver birds will shed their brightly colored feathers after the breeding season, and if they are not carefully distinguished, they will be mistaken for species such as sparrows.

Most weaver birds feed on plant seeds, and some feed on insects.

Weaver birds live in groups, often forming dozens or even hundreds of large groups. Groups of weaver birds often nest in a tree, so trees with weaver birds will hang many nests.

There is a weaver bird in South Africa. Many couples live in a bird's nest, but each couple has a separate door.

It can be inferred from the name that the weaver bird has excellent nesting skills. The Weaver Girl's Bird's Nest is pear-shaped, hanging from branches and woven with grass stems, leaves and willow fibers.

Let's look at the beautiful nest of the weaver bird.

In Thailand, people observed with drones and found that there were many fruits in the bushes. Take a closer look, it turned out to be an upside-down bird's nest, hanging on the branches like fruit.

This kind of bird is a weaver bird, distributed in tropical Africa and Asia. It is as big as a sparrow, and there are 58 species in the world.

Textile bird is one of the cleverest birds in the world. They are called the best weavers in the animal world. They often live in groups, and hundreds of them are integrated into a large group.

Their food is mainly seeds, grass seeds, breeding season and sometimes insects.

During the breeding season, males grow bright feathers and look very beautiful. They are very lively and often nest in groups on a tree.

Although they live together, they are all in pairs, and each couple has a separate entrance and exit, which will not cause confusion.

The male feathers of textile birds are black, dotted with bright red, orange or yellow, while the females are not so beautiful, pale yellow or brown, very similar to sparrows.

Textile birds use their natural skills to build their "apartment buildings" in the bushes. They weave, first build the basic skeleton with thick branches, then slowly weave the nest bit by bit, and mark each "room" at the same time to avoid confusing their own "rooms".

Weaving birds also need to build their own "new houses". Generally, males are "construction workers" and females are "inspectors". If they are not satisfied, the male bird has to be demolished and "rebuilt" until his wife is satisfied.

Then the female bird entered, officially started the "decoration project", decorated her "new house" beautifully and dazzlingly, and the young couple moved in and officially moved in, started their newly married life, laid eggs and raised their offspring. In order to prevent the birds from running out, the mother bird will also make a "fence" to protect her children from accidents. Textile birds are lovely and beautiful, and they are welcomed and loved by people. Everyone has to protect birds and precious animals.

The drone photographed the towering tree "fruitful" and the lens was enlarged, which made people exclaim. What happened?

There are many wonders in the world. Nowadays, with the development of science and technology, drones have entered the homes of ordinary people. I have nothing to do, take aerial photos with drones and enjoy the great rivers and mountains of the motherland.

A drone aerial photography enthusiast photographed this towering tree and felt that the tree was "fruity", which was a bit incredible. So he zoomed in on the aerial camera of the drone. How did he find that the fruit would still move? Later, he found that birds came in and out of the "fruit", which was embarrassing. It turns out that this "full fruit" is actually a bird's nest. What kind of bird has such a masterpiece

Only the weaver bird, as its name implies, has an extraordinary ability to weave a good nest, which makes people feel that the nest has a woven texture and plane. Weaver's bird's nest is definitely a "good cloth" if it is spread out.

The weaver bird mainly lives in the tropical areas at low latitudes. It is about the size of a sparrow, but its body color is much brighter than that of a sparrow. Like sparrows, the weaver bird is a social bird. The weaver bird has a special ability to pour its nest under the branches and turn it into a gourd, which the sparrow does not have.

Maybe you don't know, in the world of Weaver Girl, houses are also used to attract the opposite sex. The male weaver girl attracts the female weaver girl through her own nest, which is very popular with the female weaver girl, and naturally the male and female pair is successful. Because weaver birds like to live in groups, a towering tree often has dozens of bird's nests with upside-down gourds. The bird's nest flies in the air with the wind, which is very conspicuous, that is, it is full of fruits.

The weaver bird is a wild bird, protected by wild animals. Nowadays, we can see the scene of weaver birds flying in groups everywhere in farmland and forests. The environment is good, and people and weaver birds live in harmony. If you see such a bird's nest full of fruits, please don't disturb it.

When a tourist was playing in Thailand, he saw everyone looking at strange things in the tree. So he also curiously took the following scene with a drone. From a distance, it looks like an upside-down fruit, but when you look closer, it is amazing. It turns out that this is a magical bird's nest, patchwork hanging on a tree.

Are these nests woven by birds themselves or built artificially? The drone observed the camera at close range. These upside-down shapes are much larger than the nests you usually see. What kind of bird is this?

A weaver bird appears in the video. Hanging upside down on the tree is its nest, which is very complicated. It was made like this to prevent the snake from attacking. They like to be lively and live in groups. The process of nesting is also very interesting, and it is not an exaggeration to call it an architect of birds.

Habit: They like social birds, often dozens to hundreds, all living in the same tree. Sometimes several pairs of weaver birds live in the same nest, but they enter through different doors. Just like the building where we live, we live on the same floor, but in different rooms.

Species: There are about 70 species of weaver birds. This kind in the video is Pattaya, Thailand, mainly distributed in Asia and Africa. Zhidao likes to eat seeds and insects, and will jump from branch to branch looking for insects to eat.

The bird's nest is woven by father bird. It first weaves a circle with grass roots and palm leaves, and then weaves it back and forth with claws like a sweater until it is woven into a hollow sphere.

In this process, the mother bird will continue to supervise. Once the knitting is found to be poor, father bird will tear it down and knit it again until mother bird is satisfied, and they will get married and have children. After marriage, mother birds will try to decorate their nests with soft materials and set up fences to protect their chicks from falling. Everything is ready, and the mother bird begins to prepare to give birth to a bird.

This is a male bird who has just built the nest infrastructure. The complex woven net under his feet can firmly fix the nest to the branches.

Finally, birds are our friends. Don't disturb young birds and adults because of curiosity. Once the adult bird is frightened and flies away, the young bird may die.

When we meet a bird that falls to the ground, we can put it back in its nest or put it in the nearest tree, and its parents will take it home.

On May 28th, when a netizen was shooting a video with a drone outside the field, he accidentally found a towering tree covered with fruits in the distance. Driven by curiosity, he controlled the drone to fly to the tree and enlarged the picture. After seeing it clearly, he couldn't help exclaiming again and again.

It turned out that when the camera zoomed in, what I saw on the tree was not fruit, but a grotesque bird's nest. The drone also photographed a man playing near the towering tree and suddenly found many strange fruits hanging on the tree.

The man felt very strange, so he went to see what the fruit on the tree was like, but he was stopped by a local old farmer before he got close. It turns out that these bird's nests, which look like fruits from a distance, are inhabited by a local species called the yellow-breasted weaver bird. Although these birds are small, they are still fierce. If anyone approaches them carelessly, they will be attacked by their group.

Netizens zoom in through drones. After careful observation, they found that the nests of these yellow-breasted weaver birds all have one feature, the exit is downward, and some nests are two-layered. At the same time, the shape of each bird's nest is different, which adds a beautiful scenery to nature invisibly.

The yellow-breasted weaver bird belongs to a small bird. Its body length is 13- 17 cm, its mouth is conical, and its wings and tail are short. Mainly distributed in Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam, Malay Peninsula, Indonesia and China.

The breeding season of yellow-breasted weaver birds is from April to August, and they often nest together in trees. Their nests are made of grass leaves or rice leaves torn into threads. They are very delicate in structure and strange in shape, and they are bag-shaped or pear-shaped.

The nest of the yellow-breasted weaver bird is where the male woos the female, so the nesting work is done by the male. Halfway through, the male begins to try to attract the female. Woven nests will be abandoned if they cannot attract females.

But females usually only choose to fly to the male bird whose nest is half done, and females will not patronize the nest that is not half done. When the female chooses the nest, she will fly to the male's nest and mate with the male to complete the reproductive task. At this time, the male bird began to complete the remaining half of the nest.

The towering trees are full of fruits, which makes people exclaim. It's not ginseng fruit, but it's more interesting. It is a masterpiece of forest engineers!

Many years ago, it was said that there was a bird that looked like a "forest engineer". The bird's nest they built is very fashionable and extremely strong, which can not only protect against rain, but also resist strong winds.

What is particularly interesting is that when the wind blows, the bird's nest hanging under a tree begins to sway. From time to time, the curious head of the young bird sticks out at the side exit and is dragged back by the mother bird, making a cry of injustice.

This kind of bird is called the yellow-breasted weaver bird. It often nests in a tree. Belongs to birds who like to chat at home. If he has nothing to do, he will tell his parents at the exit that his children will be very promising. I also got a sesame score, 1 100.

The way the yellow-breasted weaver girl nests is quite unique, and the perverse way finally creates wonders. The upside-down nest is like a pear-shaped exotic fruit, tied to a big tree and swaying in the wind.

Why does the yellow-breasted weaver bird have a unique way of nesting?

They picked up the soft long hay with their mouths, and they crossed the branches lightly, intertwined and tied together tightly, as if to build a "foundation" on the branches. The stronger the foundation, the less it will be blown down by the wind in the future.

If you grab a handful of hay by hand and tie a strong tie, you can complete the operation of "laying the foundation", but it usually takes a day or two for the yellow-breasted weaver girl to complete this step.

After the foundation work was completed, the two Weavers began to weave their love nest with grass stems, leaves, willows and other materials.

As time goes on, the bird's nest becomes longer and longer, but it is always tightly woven. If you are careful enough, you will find that the mouth of the bag is downward. You may worry that their eggs will hit the ground, and the sleeping birds will plop on the ground at night, but don't worry, they are smart.

Because the love nest is upside down, they choose some long grass roots to go down vertically, just like the steel bars laid on the foundation, and then weave with other materials until the ends of the long grass roots begin to tighten the bag mouth and finally seal tightly.

On the side, they will open a small mouth, and then weave it firmly with fine grass to form a portal with a wide top and a concave bottom, which can resist the rain falling from the sky.

So we will see nests of different lengths hanging under a tree. From a distance, they look like pear-shaped fruits, not like a nest built by a group of weaver birds.

Like a group of clever architects, the yellow-breasted weaver bird polished a unique nest with grass in its mouth, which is not only wind-proof and rain-proof, but also quite romantic, as if the bird were sleeping in a hammock, so I think the yellow-breasted weaver bird is a dreamer in the forest!