Can you spot the predator stalking the great blue heron?

Texas photographer captures images of what he thought was simply a heron in flight, but the photos reveal an ambush in progress.

A photographer in Texas has unwittingly captured an extraordinary two-image sequence showing a great blue heron immediately before and after it was ambushed by a stealthy predator.

Can you spot and identify the predator in the image posted above and immediately below? (Answers will become evident as viewers read and scroll.)

Great blue heron takes final flight. Photo: ©Jacob Hall

Jacob Hall took the photos recently while exploring Canada Ranch near the Anahuac National Wildlife Refuge with his grandfather, Bobby Hall, and Canada Ranch owner Leroy Ezer.

He told FTW Outdoors that he didn’t realize that such a raw scene had played out until later, while he inspected his images.

Predator strikes. Photo: ©Jacob Hall

“The three of us were driving around, and then all of a sudden I noticed this great blue heron in the distance flying and quickly snapped two photos,” Hall said. “It wasn’t until after that I realized what I had just captured. “

The images were picked up by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which also quizzed followers and tweeted: “It can be hard for some of us to witness wildlife interactions like the one this photographer captured in coastal Texas, but it’s a key part of the way that our ecosystems work.”

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A post shared by Jacob Hall (@hallcam6)

The USFWS identified the predator in the same thread:

“The great blue heron eats small fish, frogs or mammals; the bobcat eats the great blue heron; and scavengers like black vultures clean up anything the bobcat leaves behind.”

Bobcat ready to pounce. Photo: ©Jacob Hall

Said Hall: “I didn’t know that the bobcat was there until after I took both photos. The second photo (bobcat attacking the heron) was taken within seconds of the first photo. I was just in the right place at the right time.”

Bullfrog’s ‘Terminator’ moment captured on video by birder

Was the mysterious orange glow in the bullfrog’s eye, during its final moments in the beak of a heron, caused by the sun? Or was it something more mysterious?

Was the bright orange glow in the bullfrog’s eye, during its final moments in the beak of a heron, caused by the sun? Or was it something more mysterious?

The accompanying footage, captured this week by Freddy Moyano in a Green Bay estuary, shows the bullfrog’s left eye glowing and blinking a bright orange after the amphibian was captured by a least bittern.

While the sun’s reflection and rustling leaves would seem to answer this mystery, Moyano stated in his YouTube description that the sun was not at the proper angle for that to have occurred.

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“The sun was not behind my back as I was filming on the East side of the path, by a pond. The sun was setting on the West,” Moyano wrote. “And the frog appears to gaze towards me and then fade with the shake of its predator. This is the only moment of the five minutes I taped where it happened, shortly after the frog was caught, still living.”

Freddy Moyano

The wildlife videographer, who also published an extended version with more details and special effects, added: “Very unique to experience while on the field especially how [the orange color] fades out almost as it life was leaving the poor frog.”

Moyano, an actor and voice-over specialist, told FTW Outdoors that the scene was reminiscent of the 1984 science-fiction movie, “The Terminator,” starring Arnold Schwarzenegger as the cyborg assassin with a glowing red eye.