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These charming seabirds, standing vigilantly on a rocky outcrop, are Atlantic Puffins (Fratercula arctica). Immediately striking is their colorful, oversized bill—a vibrant triangular structure of orange, blue, and yellow—which earns them the nickname "sea parrot" during the breeding season. My three decades of research on North Atlantic avifauna have involved tracking these pelagic divers, noting their distinctive black-and-white plumage dark charcoal upperparts contrasting sharply with a clean white face and breast. We observe the intense orange coloration around the eyes and legs, vital visual cues during social and mating displays. Though ungainly on land, their strong, webbed feet and short wings are perfectly adapted for "flying" underwater in pursuit of sand eels and other small fish. This group portrait captures the social nature of these birds as they gather in noisy, dense colonies to breed.