Flock and awe! Even the elephants are scared by jumbo cloud of tiny red-billed birds
They are among the biggest creatures to roam Africa's plains.
But even these elephants were scared by a jumbo-sized cloud of birds who are the same size as the common starling.
The red-billed queleas swarmed around this pair of pachyderms as they tried to drink at the Satao Camp water hole in East Tsavo, Kenya.
In seconds, the peace was shattered by a storm of wings, frightening the elephants away.
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Centre of a storm: These red-billed queleas terrified a herd of elephants as they stopped at a watering hole at the Satao Camp water hole in East Tsavo, Kenya
The tiny birds, which weigh just 10 grammes each, even broke a branch on a nearby tree with the combined weight of so many bodies.
In fact it was the combined weight of so many bodies of the birds on a branch that made one break with an almighty crack.
Photographer Antero Topp, 60, was at the Satao Camp water hole when the mayhem broke out.
He said: 'The birds spent most of the time feeding somewhere close to the waterhole but every morning and evening they gathered in huge flocks close to the water waiting for their time to sip a few drops.
'There are big trees close to waterhole where the birds landed and at that time we suddenly heard a strong crack.
Harmless: The birds are comparatively small but created enough of a disturbance to frighten the elephants
Jumbo sized: The birds had gathered near the watering hole where the elephants had been attempting to drink
'A huge branch had been broken by the weight of these tiny birds despite them only weighing about 10 grammes each.
'All the birds took off and you could hear an unbelievable whoosh and after that birds' ear breaking calls.
'Despite their size faced with the huge flocks of birds I was surprised to see the elephants actually back away maybe 50 metres, and some even ran.
'I think the elephants were afraid of the size and shape of the flocks and the almost supernatural whoosh noise made as they all took to the air.'
Red-billed queleas are the world's most abundant wild bird species, with an estimated breeding population of 1.5 billion pairs.
Flock and awe: The tiny birds - which are about the same size as a starling - form a cloud in the sky (left). Up close, their features include a red bill and an orange breast
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