common crane grus

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Common Crane (Grus grus) Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane (Grus grus) Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane, Grus grus, feeding grass, two big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden Royalty Free Stock Photo
Magic sunset with birds. Common Crane, Grus grus, big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden. Wildlife scene from Euro Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane, Grus grus, flying big bird in the nature habitat, Germany Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane, Grus grus, big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden. Wildlife scene from Europe. Grey crane with long Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane, Grus grus, big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden. Wildlife scene from Europe. Grey crane with long Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane (Grus grus)
Common Crane, Grus grus, flying big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane, Grus grus, big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden. Wildlife scene from Europe. Grey crane with long Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane, Grus grus, big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden. Wildlife scene from Europe. Grey crane with long Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane, Grus grus, big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden. Wildlife scene from Europe. Grey crane with long Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane, Grus grus, detail portrait, big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane, Grus grus, big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden. Crane in the green grass. Wildlife scene from Eur Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane, Grus grus, big bird in the nature habitat, Lake Hornborga, Sweden Royalty Free Stock Photo
Common Crane (Grus grus), also known as the Eurasian Crane. It breeds in wetlands in northern parts of Europe and Asia. The global population is in the region of 250,000, with the vast majority nesting in Russia and Scandinavia. In Great Britain the Common Crane became extinct in the 17th century, but a tiny population now breeds again in the Norfolk Broads and is slowly increasing. It is omnivoro


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