Our Favorite Fascinating Bird Behaviors from the 2022 Audubon Photo Awards

Every year the contest attracts entries capturing rare and unusual moments in the avian world. Check out these 11 highlights.
A Cactus Wren perches atop a broken branch, holding a large, messy mass of downy feathers in its beak, with the feathers covering up the front of its face. The wren is a medium-sized songbird, mostly brown with darker stripes and spots and with a big white eyebrow.
Cactus Wren. Photo: Mike Henry/Audubon Photography Awards

When photographing people, there is a big difference between taking portraits and taking action shots. The same is true of bird photography. We love to see beautifully composed portraits of birds at rest, but it’s also exciting when an image reflects avian subjects in the act of leading their fascinating lives. To capture such views successfully, the most important element is a working knowledge of the behavior of the species—and then predicting what the bird will do next. Top photographers often begin by watching their subjects for as long as possible, learning their patterns of movement and seeing how often they repeat. Quick reflexes help, too, since many birds move with surprising speed. And, as always, it doesn’t hurt to have a little bit of luck.  Enjoy these examples from photographers who brought all these elements together in these memorable submissions to our 2022 Audubon Photography Awards.  

Once you’re done, be sure to check out the winners of last year’s awards and our favorite Top 100 images! 

Face Full of Feathers (above)

For Cactus Wrens, nest construction is a big deal. The nest itself is substantial: a large, globular structure of twigs and dry stems, with an entrance on the side, and lined with an abundance of feathers. Cactus Wrens make nests not only for raising young, but also for roosting in at night, so each individual may be involved in building multiple nests every year. Pairs can usually find materials for the outer structure very close to the nest site, but they may have to range much farther to find the soft lining, so it’s not unusual to see a Cactus Wren flying through the desert with its bill stuffed full of feathers.

Flirty Birds 

Against a dark, leafy background, two Great Egrets perch on top of a nest made of sticks. The egrets are bright white with long black legs, long yellow bills, and bright green bare skin on their faces. They are sitting close together, facing each other, with their long necks curved and almost intertwined, one resting its chin on top of the other one’s head.
Great Egrets. Photo: Lance Leonhardt/Audubon Photography Awards

The feathers of Great Egrets are pure white at all seasons, and the birds wear long, flowing plumes for much of the year. For these egrets, courtship colors are expressed in their faces: The bare skin between their eyes and bill turns bright lime-green at the height of breeding season. Courtship displays between members of a pair are usually performed at or near the nest. These may include odd stretching postures, bowing, exaggerated preening, fluffing out the feathers of the neck and crest, and many more. At close range, the birds may also engage in a gentle mock dueling with their bills, or crossing their necks, like the individuals in this portrait.

Snow-nar 

A Great Gray Owl sits on snow-covered ground, half-buried in the snow, with its wings partly spread out on the surface. It is looking down intently at the surface of the snow in front of it. The owl is gray-brown with lots of fine mottled markings. Its face is gray, with narrow lines forming concentric circles around its yellow eyes.
Great Gray Owl. Photo: Linda Scher/Audubon Photography Awards

Owls are legendary for their ability to locate prey by sound alone. Their asymmetrical ears, with the ear openings positioned and sized differently on each side of the head, allow them to pinpoint the source of a sound in three dimensions with remarkable accuracy. Of course this ability is useful for owls hunting in the dark, but it’s also of great value for hunting small prey hidden under layers of snow. The Great Gray Owl hunts voles, mice, and other rodents in winter by listening for their movements and then plunging feet-first into the snow, grasping prey as much as a foot and a half below the surface.

It’s a Steal

In the upper left corner of the image is the lower half of an oriole nest, tightly woven of plant fibers—and with many colorful artificial fibers of white, orange, red, and blue. In the foreground is a Cedar Waxwing fluttering in midair with its back to us, tugging on one of the white artificial fibers from the nest. The waxwing is a fairly small songbird, mostly brown and gray, with yellow tips on its tail feathers.
Cedar Waxwing. Photo: Diana Rebman/Audubon Photography Awards

Most birds, when they’re building nests, choose materials with care—but not always with good results. Orioles, for example, need long, strong plant fibers to weave their hanging nests. When they live near humans, they often seize on colorful strands of plastic or other artificial materials, and sometimes they get trapped in loops of these unyielding items. Bad judgment is contagious, though, and after the orioles have finished nesting and departed, other species may steal these materials to use in their own nests. Here, a Cedar Waxwing tugs at a string from an oriole nest. Because waxwings start breeding later in the summer than most songbirds, they often raid supplies from nests recently abandoned by other species.

Dune Dispute    

On a snow-covered mound, among tall yellow grass, a Snowy Owl sits hunched on the ground with its mouth open, as if calling out. In the foreground—above the owl, and closer to us—is a Northern Harrier flying directly away from us and toward the owl, with its wings on the downstroke and its tail spread wide. The owl is mostly white, while the harrier is brown with darker markings.
Snowy Owl and Northern Harrier. Photo: Howard Arndt/Audubon Photography Awards

Northern Harriers are among the most widespread hawks in winter across North America, and because they hunt mostly by flying low over open areas, birders often get to watch them in action. It’s not unusual to see aggressive encounters among harriers or between harriers and other species. When one of the raptors has captured prey and another is trying to steal it, these skirmishes may be intense, but otherwise they’re usually brief. Here, a harrier swoops at a Snowy Owl on a dune. It’s not likely to attack—the owl weighs about four times as much as the harrier—so this is mostly just a display of attitude between predators.

Dust Up  

A roadrunner lies on bare dirt, with its tail and head flattened on the ground, its back feathers fluffed up, and its wings partly spread. It’s partly surrounded by a cloud of dust kicked up from the ground. The roadrunner is mostly brown, heavily streaked with white.
Greater Roadrunner. Photo: Joanne Wuori/Audubon Photography Awards

Regular bathing is an important part of the self-maintenance routine of many birds. Bathing in water is the usual approach, but water isn’t always easy to find—especially in the desert habitat of the Greater Roadrunner. However, roadrunners make the most of what’s available. They take dust baths frequently, flopping down in loose, dry dirt, then moving their feet and fluttering their wings to spray fine dust up over their bodies. When they preen the dust out of their feathers, it helps to remove grease, flakes of dry skin, and perhaps a few lice or other external parasites. Dust-bathing seems to meet their needs, and they seldom bathe in water even when it’s available

Signs of Affection  

On top of a large, flat pile of sticks, two adult Great Blue Herons are perched close together. One is standing upright with its wings partly spread. It’s holding a large stick and appears to be offering it to the second bird, which is crouched lower. Each heron is blue-gray with a yellow beak and with a wispy black crest on its white head.
Great Blue Herons. Photo: Camelia Marculescu/Audubon Photography Awards

The nest, a large flat structure, is the focal point for romantic activities by Great Blue Herons. These big birds have a wide variety of courtship postures and displays, some of them surprisingly practical. Large sticks are the main nest materials, and the adults continue to add them throughout the breeding cycle, using them to reinforce the pair bond as well as the physical structure of the nest. Typically the male brings most of the sticks, and the female does most of the exacting work of placing them in just the right spot. The members of the pair make a ritual out of passing sticks to each other, just one more move to keep romance alive.

Mind Games 

On top of a wooden railing like that of a bridge or fence, a Common Raven and an adult Bald Eagle sit facing each other and just a couple of feet apart. The raven, solid black with a thick bill, is a big bird, but less than half the eagle’s size. The eagle is dark brown with white head and white tail; it has its wings partly spread. The postures of both birds suggest that they may be agitated.
Bald Eagle and Common Raven. Photo: Kathleen Glisson/Audubon Photography Awards

Bald Eagles are widely admired, but in many ways the Common Raven is a more remarkable bird. Classified as a songbird but near the size of a hawk, it’s thought to be one of the most intelligent avian species; it’s adapted to a wide variety of habitats all over the Northern Hemisphere, from the Arctic to the tropics. Ravens are often scavengers, feeding on kills left by wolves, bears, or Golden Eagles. Their interactions with Bald Eagles—which are also scavengers—may involve competing for carrion. In this photo, the raven may be simply playing, taunting the larger raptor, while deftly staying out of reach.

Urban Aerialists 

In the foreground, against a blue sky, are more than 20 Rock Pigeons flying toward the right, the bright white undersides of their wings contrasting with their gray bodies. Back behind them in the center of the frame is an adult Peregrine Falcon flying to the left. The falcon has a gray back and a black hooded pattern, and its position in the air suggests that it’s starting to turn, as if to follow the pigeons.
Peregrine Falcon and Rock Pigeons. Photo: Brian Rusnica/Audubon Photography Awards

Rock Pigeons are native to the Old World, but they have established thriving feral flocks in many North American urban centers. Peregrine Falcons originally placed their nests on cliffs in wilderness areas, but they have adapted to city life also. Tall buildings there provide cliff-like nest sites, and there’s a ready food source: flocks of Rock Pigeons. Peregrines are famed as among the fastest flying birds, both when plunging from the sky and in level pursuit. But the pigeons are also swift and agile, their flocks splitting and sweeping wide when chased, and they often evade the falcons. This deadly dance between predator and prey is sometimes watched by alert observers even in our largest cities.

Tying the Knot(s)

A nest, composed of a tightly woven ball of grass stems, hangs from the end of a twig. Two sparrow-sized birds called Southern Masked-Weavers are in the picture. One is a plain yellow female, and she’s poking her head out of a hole near the bottom of the nest. The other is a male, brighter yellow with a black mask and red eyes, and he’s hanging upside down, holding onto the bottom of the nest with his feet.
Southern Masked-Weavers. Photo: Cindee Beechwood/Audubon Photography Awards

The weavers are well named. These songbirds of Africa and southern Asia are famed for their ability to weave green grasses together, tying intricate knots in the stems, to create sturdy nests. Some weavers form very large colonies but in this species, the Southern Masked-Weaver, a “colony” may consist of one male and several females with a handful of nests in an isolated tree. The male builds the outer shell of the nest—a hanging ball with the entrance near the bottom—and does a singing, wing-waving display there to attract a mate. If it works, the female (peering out of the entrance in this photo) will complete the nest by adding the inner lining.

Sociable Siskins 

In a close-up view, two Pine Siskins perch among bare twigs, facing each other with the tips of their bills touching. Their positions suggest that one might be passing some small item of food to the other, although the food isn’t visible. The siskins are small, compact songbirds, pale brown with darker brown stripes, and with touches of bright yellow on their wings.
Pine Siskins. Photo: Colleen Reilly/Audubon Photography Awards

Courtship feeding is a common behavior in several kinds of birds. As it usually plays out, early in the breeding season the male begins offering food to the female, often as part of a ritualized courtship display. This happens with birds as varied as hawks, terns, cardinals, and finches. For Pine Siskins, however, there’s a twist: They may engage in this behavior at any time of year, and it may involve two males or two females, not necessarily a male and female. They may simply touch bill tips, rather than passing food. For these highly social birds, the ritual may help to promote cohesion within the flock.