Courtesy Tim Laman
Wildlife photographer Tim Laman has spent three decades photographing birds of every shape and size across six continents. He's crawled through marshes, stood in river deltas, and crouched in camouflaged "blinds" to try to capture the perfect shot. Highlights of his exhilarating career are collected in his new photo book, "Bird Planet," from the striking scarlet ibis (pictured) to dazzling birds-of-paradise. Look through the gallery to see more of his stunning images.
Courtesy Tim Laman
Laman says he often pre-plans and sets up aspects of his shot, like this one of a hummingbird in California. Hummingbirds are territorial, feeding on the same flowers multiple times a day, allowing Laman to choose a spot they frequent, observe them and set up his equipment. "You can kind of pre visualize the shot and think about the background, foreground, lighting and angles," he says. "You can try to almost design a beautiful shot, (and then) wait for the bird to come do his thing."
Courtesy Tim Laman
Some shots are more opportunistic -- like this one of a male rhinoceros hornbill in flight with a mouse in its beak, at Budo Su-ngai Padi National Park, Thailand. Describing them as the "largest and most charismatic birds of the canopy," Laman featured them in his first article for National Geographic magazine.
Courtesy Tim Laman
Photographing every species of the tropical birds-of-paradise became Laman's passion project, and he spent 544 days over eight years in New Guinea scouting the birds and setting up shots. This is a rare blue bird-of-paradise, captured on its favorite feeding tree in the Tari Valley in Papua New Guinea.
Courtesy Tim Laman
In Coachella Valley, California, Laman captured a close-up portrait of Costa's hummingbird. He spent hours watching the hummingbird return to its favorite perch to rest, and moved closer until he was within six feet of the tiny bird.
Courtesy Tim Laman
One of Laman's favorite photographs is of a Greater bird-of-paradise at sunrise in New Guinea, Indonesia. It became the face of a successful protest by local conservationists to prevent parts of the rainforest being turned into sugarcane plantations. "If we protect the habitat for the birds, then everything else in that rainforest and Aru is also going to benefit," says Laman.
Courtesy Tim Laman
"When you freeze a bird in flight, or a bird taking off or displaying, you capture a moment in time that most people don't see," says Laman. On one of his five trips to Antarctica, he captured this Adélie penguin "porpoising," a behaviour which allows it to catch a breath and look for where to land as it leaps in and out the water.
Courtesy Tim Laman
As a conservation photographer, Laman says showing birds in their habitats helps to remind people they are part of a larger ecosystem. "That's one reason why (I include) these wider shots, where the birds are small in the environment. I think they're really important for getting that message across, about the importance of healthy habitats," says Laman.

Editor’s Note: Call to Earth is a CNN editorial series committed to reporting on the environmental challenges facing our planet, together with the solutions. Rolex’s Perpetual Planet initiative has partnered with CNN to drive awareness and education around key sustainability issues and to inspire positive action.

CNN  — 

“I’m willing, more than most people, to go through some discomfort.”

That’s how American conservation photographer Tim Laman ended up with water rising over his knees in a marshy river delta at midnight, his camera gear floating by his side. “I got myself into a situation,” he admits.

Laman was in Venezuela’s Orinoco Basin searching for scarlet ibises, bright orange-red birds that roost among the tangle of mangrove roots and sticky mudflats at dusk. He wanted to photograph the birds in the evening and morning light – which meant spending the night on a fixed plywood raft in the middle of the river. But the tide charts he was using were incomplete and, as the sun set, the water came up over the raft.

“I spent the whole night standing on the platform, waiting for the tide to go back down, which it finally did by morning,” says Laman. “The sun came up and I got my camera back out and got more pictures of the birds.”

It’s a shot from this trip that wraps around the cover of his new photo book, “Bird Planet,” capturing the birds in flight, contrasted against a baby blue sky and softly glowing full moon.

“I think it was worth it, overall,” he jokes. This misadventure was the worst, he says, although after spending three decades photographing birds, he’s put himself in many precarious positions in pursuit of the perfect image.

Courtesy Tim Laman
Laman's dynamic photos give an insight into how birds live and move -- such as this rhinoceros hornbill carrying a mouse to its nest in Thailand.

“When you freeze the moment of a bird in flight, taking off, or in a (mating) display, you capture a moment in time,” says Laman, who hopes his work will inspire people to take care of birds, and their habitats.

“They’re one of the most charismatic and readily-observed types of wildlife, that people can see whether in the city or the country,” he says, adding: “Getting people to appreciate and pay attention more is one of my goals.”

544 days and 40,000 photos

Laman developed his lifelong obsession with tropical birds while carrying out research for his Ph.D. in the rainforests of Borneo. In the early 2000s, he pitched a story to National Geographic about the birds-of-paradise of New Guinea, a tropical island in the South Pacific split between the nation of Papua New Guinea in the east, and Indonesia to the west. According to Laman, the publication had never run a feature on the birds with photographs: “It seemed like a group that was really under-photographed and under-appreciated,” he adds.

Laman visited New Guinea five times for the article, presenting photos of around 15 species for the feature spread. But he wanted to do more, and made it his mission to photograph all 39 species known to science at the time (since then that number has increased to 45).

Between 2004 and 2012, Laman and ornithologist Edwin Scholes made 18 trips to New Guinea, spending 544 days there in total. Laman took nearly 40,000 pictures, becoming the first person to capture every known species of the bird-of-paradise on camera.

This enormous endeavor gets a whole chapter in the book, revealing the birds’ dramatic and colorful mating displays.

Courtesy Tim Laman
This rare blue bird-of-paradise is foraging on its favorite tree in the Tari Valley in Papua New Guinea.

“Once you find their display site during the breeding season, they usually come every morning,” he says, adding that he would spend up to eight hours a day in a “blind,” the camouflaged shelter that scientists and photographers use to observe wildlife up close, waiting for the birds.

He also shot footage of the birds-of-paradise which has made its way into wildlife documentaries, including “Dancing with the Birds” on Netflix, and contributed to scientific research.

Laman is the co-founder of The Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s Birds-of-Paradise Project, where his videos and images are archived for scientists to use in research.

In one instance, Laman’s work provided corroboration for a DNA study which identified a distinct species of bird-of-paradise. “Once we recorded its behavior and revealed the shape of the plumes of the displaying male, it was really clear,” says Laman.

Another study on the colors and dancing rituals of the birds-of-paradise’s mating displays utilized nearly 1,000 video clips from the archive, allowing the researchers to conduct “a very detailed analysis of the evolution of the bird-of-paradise displays, without ever going to New Guinea,” says Laman.

A flagship species for the forest

Laman is a founding member of the International League of Conservation Photographers, and his work has played a critical role in conservation.

His image of a greater bird-of-paradise at sunset became the face of a successful conservation campaign in New Guinea, that prevented a huge swathe of rainforest from being turned into a sugarcane plantation.

Courtesy Tim Laman
Laman's photo of this greater bird-of-paradise in Indonesian New Guinea became the face of a conservation campaign to save the rainforest.

New Guinea is home to the third largest rainforest in the world, after the Amazon and Congo, and with 80% still intact it’s important as a home for wildlife and for sequestering carbon.

However, plans for industrial logging, mining operations, palm oil plantations and major infrastructure projects are threatening the integrity of these forests.

Laman hopes the birds-of-paradise can be a flagship species for New Guinea, and “bring people’s attention to this important forest that we should try to protect.”

He’s also eager to show people that beautiful wildlife doesn’t just exist in far-flung places: “Bird Planet” highlights the splendor of birds in his own backyard in Lexington, Massachusetts, such as blue jays and pileated woodpeckers. Laman hopes that readers will connect the photos in his book with the wildlife they see every day, and take action to protect pockets of nature wherever they exist.

“Birds are everywhere, from Antarctica to the Arctic to the tropics,” says Laman. “If we can protect habitats for birds, then it’s a great way to protect habitats for everything else.”

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