@nextsandals: Mary Jane mules are having a moment ๐Ÿ–ค Black patent on feet for sleek office fits + Leopard for when you want attention. Double strap + triangle detail + flat sole = comfy + put-together. No heels, no pain, all the compliments. Sizes 37-42 Kampala delivery 5minutes-2hrs depending and DM โ€œMARY JANE + color + sizeโ€ to order ๐Ÿ’ฌ #Balletcore #MaryJaneFlats #ZaraStyle #kampalastyle #ugandafashion

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Monday 22 June 2026 16:20:25 GMT
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the **Northern Pintail** (*Anas acuta*): ### **Overview** The Northern Pintail is a widely distributed, elegant, and medium-to-large sized dabbling duck. It is highly recognized for its slender profile, long neck, and distinctive pointed tail, earning it the nickname
the **Northern Pintail** (*Anas acuta*): ### **Overview** The Northern Pintail is a widely distributed, elegant, and medium-to-large sized dabbling duck. It is highly recognized for its slender profile, long neck, and distinctive pointed tail, earning it the nickname "the greyhound of the waterfowl world." ### **Physical Appearance** * **Males (Drakes):** Highly striking with a dark chocolate-brown head, a white stripe running down the side of the neck to a bright white breast, and a greyish body. Their most notable feature is the long, black, pin-like central tail feathers. * **Females (Hens):** Mottled brown with a tan head and a shorter pointed tail. They are more subtly colored to provide camouflage during nesting. ### **Habitat and Behavior** * **Diet:** Omnivorous. They feed by dabbling (tipping tail-up in shallow water) on aquatic plants, seeds, insects, and small crustaceans. They also frequently forage in agricultural grain fields. * **Flight:** They are exceptionally fast and graceful flyers, often flying in large, tight flocks. * **Migration:** Strongly migratory, breeding in northern areas of North America, Europe, and Asia, and flying long distances south to winter in warmer climates (including parts of Central America, Africa, and Southern Asia). ### **Status and Conservation** While they remain widespread and numerous globally, their populations have faced historic declines in North America due to habitat loss in their breeding grounds (prairie potholes) and droughts. Consequently, they are a focus of many wetland conservation efforts.

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