Strike a Pose: 12 Pics of Birds Being Birds

From brawls to star-crossed romances, these paparazzi birders caught it all on camera.

Supermodels have more to offer聽than聽just their聽poses鈥攁nd birds are no exception. Behind every聽vogue display聽is a聽decisive adaption, a quirky behavior, or an act of聽passion.

In the聽entries for our 2016 photo awards, we saw courage, heart, and brains. From songbirds wreaking havoc on much larger raptors, to couples dancing in the throes of courtship, the spectrum of performances聽is near infinite. We're just lucky that our contestants were able to get them on camera.

Enjoy these candid takes, and learn more about each species聽and its "etiquette" below.聽

(Above) Bow Down

Most members of the sandpiper family are not known for fancy feathers, but the 鈥攚idespread in Europe and Asia鈥攊s a stunning exception. In spring, during breeding season,聽male Ruffs develop long neck plumes in a wide variety of colors. They then gather on display grounds called leks, and聽dance and show off to attract females. Scientists are still of the different Ruff color patterns.

Zaha Hadid's Understudy

Many African weaverbirds live up to the family name by weaving elaborate nests out of grass or other plant fibers. This聽male draws attention with a courtship display by hanging聽upside down under the nest, singing and waving his wings. With all that effort, he can hardly have his聽architectural skills be聽overlooked.

Get Off My Lawn

Maybe that聽red patch on his wing is a chip on his shoulder, but this聽male Red-winged Blackbird is an uber-confident bird. Throughout the nesting season, he鈥檒l chase away聽any large bird that approaches his territory鈥攅ven one as large as this young Bald Eagle. Raptors聽that trespass on a聽large marsh containing multiple blackbird territories have it even worse; they'll likely be escorted off the premises by a whole string of raucous male Red-wings.

Zero聽Gender Boundaries

In many bird species, females do most of the work of rearing the young. But male woodpeckers are often model dads, taking an equal role in digging the nest cavity, incubating the eggs, and feeding the chicks. Here, a聽Black-backed Woodpecker couple聽(male with a yellow crown patch, female without) arrives聽to feed a juvenile male that鈥檚 begging from inside the nest.

Get at Me, Mah

A male flies in to feed its聽stub-tailed fledgling in a meadow in Switzerland. Stonechats build their nests on or near the ground. In many low-nesting songbirds, the young leave the nest as soon as they can, before they鈥檙e able to fly well. Evidently the dangers of being out in the world are not as risky as being聽grounded鈥攁nd being sitting ducks, so to speak, for passing predators.

Baby's First Hitchhike

One way to make sure the kids are safe: carry them on your back. During the first couple of weeks after a Common Loon hatches, it often rests on the back of one of its parents. This chick-carrying behavior must have major advantages, because it crops up in unrelated groups of water birds, including loons, grebes, swans, geese, and some ducks.

Only One Way Up

For young owls, leaving the nest is seldom a graceful act. Often they outgrow their nest space before they can fly, so they聽venture out onto adjacent branches. Young Great Gray Owls frequently wind up falling, but their fluffy down cushions their landing, and usually they can clamber up a handy tree trunk by flapping of their stubby wings. The goal: Get back up聽to a safe perch above the ground.

The Moss Is Always Greener聽

Our most aquatic songbird, the American Dipper, is almost never seen away from rushing mountain streams. It finds almost all its food underwater, walking and swimming against the current to nab invertebrates and tiny fish. Its nest,聽a globular mass of mosses,聽is always placed close to the water鈥攕ometimes so close that spray keeps the moss green and growing.聽

There Will Be Blood

The two species of giant petrels are most reliably distinguished by the color of the bill tip鈥攗nless their bills are covered with blood, which is actually quite often. These big, ungainly seabirds range聽widely over the southern oceans, preying on smaller ocean creatures (including penguins), fighting over seal carcasses, and scavenging o dumped by ships.

Do-See-Do

The聽courtship dances of prairie grouse are among the most iconic spectacles of聽springtime in North America. Sage-grouse and prairie-chickens may be better known for their waltzes, but Sharp-tailed Grouse can聽also show off some聽impressive dance moves. The males are the ones who get down while聽vying to attract the attention of females. Fights between rival males are frequent聽but brief, and may be mostly for showing off.

A Love/Hate Relationship

The grebe family contains only about 20 species, but is collectively found聽almost all around the world. This , a South American species, was photographed at a pond on the Falkland Islands, where a few pairs were going through breeding-season rituals. A simple but fiece posture like this might be used for聽either aggression or courtship. The birds, at least,聽seem to be able to tell the difference.

Stunting for Appetizers

Great Egrets may seem to be the most patient of anglers, standing stock-still at the water鈥檚 edge or wading slowly through the shallows, waiting for a fish to come within striking range. When patience fails, however, they鈥檒l explode out over the water. At times they鈥檒l even hover or flutter low聽to grab a fish from just below the surface.