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Z. Alexander Brown: Uncaged – Cabernet Sauvignon (2017)

10,000 Birds

Just yesterday I learned that the Barn Owl ( Tyto alba ) is the only breeding bird found in New York that has been documented nesting in every month of the year. This bit of trivia was given in an article in my local bird club’s monthly newsletter about the ongoing breeding bird atlas in New York State. The post Z.

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The most important book about European birds in this century

10,000 Birds

The adventure of the second European Breeding Bird Atlas, or EBBA2, was the topic of one of my first posts here at 10,000 Birds: In a warm Catalonian March, Barcelona is filled with sunlight and full of Rose-ringed and Monk Parakeets. Original artwork illustrates all species with a full account.

Europe 264
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Good News for South Georgia Island’s Pipit Population

10,000 Birds

A bird species battling an onslaught of invasive rats just got a glimpse of hope. While this is happy news for any parents, and wonderful news for any threatened species (these Pipits live only on Antarctica’s South Georgia Island and number only 3,000-4,000 pairs), it’s tremendous news for those trying to eradicate rats from the island.

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Magpie Geese breed near Broome once again

10,000 Birds

In 2017 the arrival of the Magpie Geese warned us of the high rainfall ahead and then they bred in the area. The highway divides a huge expanse of flooded land and numerous bird species have bred in the area over recent weeks. The Magpie Geese bred again in the Broome area during 2018.

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Raimat Saira Albariño (2017)

10,000 Birds

If they can spare a glance upward, the busy grape-pickers might also be treated to another portent of the changing seasons in the Iberian skies overhead: the sight of flocks of White Storks ( Ciconia ciconia ) heading south from their summer breeding grounds in Europe to Africa, where they spend the winter on the warm savannas.

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The Shorebirds of North America: A Natural History and Photographic Celebration–A Book Review

10,000 Birds

Taking inspiration from Matthiessen’s 1967 book (long out of print), which combined his natural history essays with species accounts by Ralph S. Species Profile, Black-necked Stilt, p. 57; © 2024 by Pete Dunne and Kevin T.

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Birding the Yinggehai Salt Flats, Hainan

10,000 Birds

Carrie answered the question in a 2017 post , stating that “In general, the Europeans of yore assigned the common name ‘rail’ to members of the family with longer bills and ‘crake’ to the birds with stubby ones.” Anyway, it seems to work reasonably well for the two species I saw here.

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