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birds

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  • North American birds migrate to southern coasts, the West Indies an
  • Most birds migrate to the tropics in winter, with Europea
  • A great variety of birds migrate past the park along the Mississippi Fl
  • nmost populations are resident, but most other birds migrate south to winter in Pakistan and India,
  • Some southern region birds migrate northeastwards in the austral winter i
  • Such birds migrate during August to the northern regions
  • Various kinds of birds migrate there for breeding in monsoon season (
  • Other birds migrate to the southern United States and Mexi
  • Some birds migrate north in winter, reaching as far as Ur
  • It is partially resident, but many birds migrate further south, or move to the coasts.
  • It is mainly resident, but some northern birds migrate short distances.
  • These birds migrate in the winter to the southwestern Unit
  • These birds migrate to Mexico and Central America.
  • It is an important stop for birds migrating along the Pacific Flyway, particular
  • liminary draft of the treaty for protection of birds migrating between Canada and the United States
  • ean DET is the daily estimated total number of birds migrating across Prince Edward Point, and the
  • n important stopover point for many species of birds migrating along the Pacific Flyway.
  • PRBO was founded in 1965 to study the birds migrating along the Pacific flyway, and has ru
  • hese sounds in the sky and knew that they were birds migrating overhead," says Rosenberg.
  • The loss of a migration area for birds migrating from Eurasia to Africa, and conseque
  • The major routes of birds migrating along the eastern portion of the Uni
  • and other mammals, is practically non-toxic to birds, moderately toxic to freshwater invertebrates
  • Along the way, they encounter the legendary birds Moltres and Articuno who feel the effects of t
  • perimental cognition work with human children, birds, monkeys, robots and human adult clinical outp
  • It houses some great cats, various birds, monkeys, ungulates, snakes and an aquarium.
  • the persecutors; for there are none among the birds more persecuted than turtle-doves and pigeons,
  • by rabbits altered the vegetation, making the birds more vulnerable to predation.
  • The Peak is home to many species of birds, most prominently the Black Kite, and to numer
  • Some of the birds most often spotted include the Prothonotary Wa
  • e of small marsupials, and numerous species of birds, most prominent among which are the rosellas.
  • t also captures mice, small lizards, and small birds mostly when the young are being fed.
  • The Spaces between Birds: Mother/Daughter Poems, 1967-1995, University
  • After nesting, North American birds move in flocks further north along the coasts,
  • ern species are partially migratory, with many birds moving south to warmer areas in winter.
  • Food is obtained in flocks of ten or more birds moving together on the ground including insect
  • The depiction of communal dances, birds, musical instruments, mother and child pregnan
  • majority of either one of these in the case of birds, must be incised with a back and forth motion
  • proving how early the ancestors of all living birds must have constituted a lineage distinct from
  • Though such birds must have existed by that time already, and mo
  • eekers' hit was used, played by Stan Butcher's Birds n Brass.
  • lar songs from the film include Anbe vaa, Love birds, Nadodi, Naan paarthathilay, Pudhiya vaanam an
  • Feldegg had a number of birds named after him, including the Black-headed Wa
  • The birds named "whydahs" have long or very long tails i
  • forests and grasslands are home to most of the birds native to central Minnesota.
  • Tweedy imitated the sound of twelve different birds native to the South Pacific for the film.
  • hs, are a family, Viduidae, of small passerine birds native to Africa.
  • Favourite subjects include birds, Nature, and people in the street.
  • e swallows may form flocks of several thousand birds near roost sites.
  • Noted for its grassland nesting birds, neo-tropical migrants and raptors, the refuge
  • A wide variety of heathland birds nest on the site, including Nightjar, Whitethr
  • East African birds nest in hollow trees, whereas in South Africa
  • studies have shown that up to 40,000 pairs of birds nest on the island each year.
  • The birds nest in large colonies Recently, they have sta
  • These birds nest in large marshes with dense vegetation fr
  • The Birds Nest Stadium).
  • These birds nest in a horizontal tunnel made in a river ba
  • Birds Nest Buffet - Open daily.
  • oxic to the trees and kills them off after the birds nest in a spot for less than a year.
  • Both of these birds nest in the Edwards Plateau, the Warbler exclu
  • , one of the few places in Ireland where these birds nest.
  • se of the bell is restricted, due to protected birds nesting in the belfry, meaning it can only be
  • al cavity-nesting barbets, sometimes with both birds nesting in close proximity.
  • berant marine life and a high concentration of birds nesting on the cliffs, such as the rare Bonell
  • w River valleys are very important centres for birds' nesting, feeding and resting.
  • ble for the care of the national collection of birds' nests and eggs in the Bird Room at the Natura
  • Birds' Nests (1902)
  • Believing this a good place to hunt birds' nests, Farmer attempted to climb the tree to
  • though in the straw of stables or in abandoned birds' nests.
  • prigs of garden or wild flowers, and sometimes birds' nests.
  • of dried plant matter such as dead leaves and birds' nests.
  • Cut-throat Finches usually use wavers or other birds nests.
  • This included fifty-six birds new to science, including the Indian Pond Hero
  • responsible for shows such as Roots, The Thorn Birds, North & South, L.A. Confidential, and the fil
  • e Greek gods and suits depicting four kinds of birds, not the common suits.
  • he much inferior size (which may be due to the birds not being fully grown).
  • More than 200 species of birds, notably the Red-crested Pochard, the Little R
  • Frome,N F (1946): Birds noted in the Mahasu-Narkanda-Baghi area of the
  • genic material, the remains of many species of birds now either globally or locally extinct, that w
  • uccessful on Fonualei and an estimated 350-500 birds now breed there, but surveys of Late subsequen
  • hly sought after as a pet and trapping of wild birds, now illegal, has contributed to population de
  • Species of birds observed at the lake include double-crested co
  • d after by [H.L. Popham (1864-1943)] “Notes of birds observed on the Yenesei River, Siberia, in 189
  • larna (1856-87) which described 238 species of birds observed in Sweden.
  • Tytler,RC (1868) Notes on the birds observed during a march from Simla to Mussoori
  • terestingly, the Bonin Thrush is not among the birds observed or collected by the Beechey Pacific e
  • Notes on birds observed in the region between Mahanadi and Go
  • No galliform birds occur in New Guinea, and the pheasant pigeon h
  • In Britain, these birds occur in winter in good numbers principally al
  • Many of the birds occurring in Western Europe may be on a regula
  • rotophagidae) are a small family of gregarious birds occurring in the Americas.
  • mented and declining population of 1,200-1,400 birds occurs.
  • Humans, migratory birds, ocean currents, etc. can introduce species th
  • The Birds of Siberia: The Yenesei.
  • age interest in, and develop knowledge of, the birds of the Canberra region
  • Main article: List of birds of Gibraltar
  • The Birds of South America (1912, with Lord Brabourne)
  • The Birds of British Guiana (2 volumes, 1916 and 1921)
  • ides is a genus of the prehistoric pseudotooth birds of somewhat doubtful validity.
  • It contains papers on the birds of Africa and its islands, including peer-revi
  • Edward Smith Stanley publishes Remarks on the birds of Abyssinia in A Voyage to Abyssinia, & Trave
  • ashore themed aviary with a wave machine and a birds of prey area.
  • tta, and afterwards became an authority on the birds of South Asia, following in the footsteps of P
  • 's room, panels, author readings and signings, Birds of a Feather sessions, and an art show.
  • In his book Birds of a Feather: The Press and the Politicians, A
  • In that same month, the A-Side, Birds of a Feather, was released as a single under E
  • First part of Birds of America by John James Audubon published.
  • e name, if from the Italian passagieri meaning birds of passage, is either suggestive of an emigrat
  • e, Baggot and Golden Guernsey Goats, Geese and Birds of Prey including a Hooded Vulture.
  • work includes painting 69 of the 180 plates in Birds of South Asia.
  • s moved to England and wrote a Handbook on the Birds of West Africa (1930).
  • , a Grizzly Bear, a pack of Wolves and several Birds of Prey (Hawks, Falcons, Eagles and Owls).
  • ganization whose mission is to study migrating birds of prey along the Pacific coast and to inspire
  • Birds of Sea and Coast (1978) Penguin ISBN 014063003
  • nd when the lambs say among themselves, "These birds of prey are evil, and he who least resembles a
  • Atlas of the Birds of the Western Palearctic (Collins, 1982)
  • The Field Guide to the Birds of New Zealand.
  • white without any markings or pattern in adult birds of this genus, which distinguishes them from a
  • , Annuals, Joan Jett, The Actual, Ozma, Polvo, Birds of Avalon and Blankface.
  • Birds of India by Grimmett, Inskipp and Inskipp, ISB
  • Birds Of A Feather (BBC - music for one season and a
  • s in its Children's Zoo, as well as over 12000 birds of over 130 species in an aviary.
  • He wrote (1925-1934) A handbook of the birds of eastern China.
  • 1974: The Birds of the Seychelles and the Outlying Islands
  • He also had runs as interior penciler on both Birds of Prey and Nightwing.
  • For his work, The Birds of the Belgian Congo, Part I, he was awarded t
  • His principal work concerned the fossil birds of Queensland (Darling Downs) and southern Aus
  • was titled "Populations and breeding cycles of birds of the western coast of Africa from Cape Barba
  • In The Birds of North America, No. 351 (A.
  • The Birds of Siberia: To the Petchora Valley.
  • It also attracts wintering birds of prey, including Hen Harrier, Merlin, Peregr
  • His unpublished manuscript on the Birds of Arabia was later used by Meinertzhagen.
  • n: The Series, Marple: Murder at the Vicarage, Birds of a Feather, and The Bill early appearances i
  • rohierax fringillarius) is one of the smallest birds of prey, typically measuring between 14-16 cen
  • A Guide to the Birds of Trinidad and Tobago (2nd edition ed.).
  • Phalcoboenus is a small genus of birds of prey in the Falconidae family.
  • The split was not followed in Handbook of the Birds of the World, where it was described as "perha
  • Birds of Bhutan, with Salim Ali and Biswamoy Biswas
  • A guide to the birds of Costa Rica by Stiles and Skutch ISBN 0-8014
  • ain Guide, is home to hundreds of butterflies, birds of prey and reptiles, and lies just outside th
  • rials Kings Bicycle Display Team, Ben Potter's Birds of Prey; the award-winning Knottingley Silver
  • A Handlist of the Birds of South Australia.
  • lly valid genus of the prehistoric pseudotooth birds of somewhat doubtful validity.
  • A Handlist of the Birds of South Australia, with Annotations.
  • About 4,000 birds of over 700 different species live on the site
  • Peterson First Guide to Birds of North America (Houghton Mifflin‚ 1986)
  • ng a familiar and technical description of the Birds of the British Isles, Illustrations of the Bir
  • A Guide to the Birds of Australia is a book first published in 1931
  • ellbird) is the common name given to passerine birds of the genus Procnias, found in the Neotropics
  • His major works included the Birds of Vietnam and the Conspectus of the ornitholo
  • Swainson W. Ornithology Birds of Western Africa- Part 1 1862.
  • The birds of eastern North America known to occur east o
  • g to a theological seminary) to be devoured by birds of prey.
  • e lambs should bear a grudge against the great birds of prey, but that is no reason for blaming the
  • Birds of prey include the Buzzard, Goshawk and Red K
  • s and the actual spire is now used for special birds of prey for roosting.
  • Birds of the Middle East and North Africa.
  • Eurocephalus shrikes are birds of savanna and open woodland habitats, typical
  • Birds of Tokyo also performed at the Perth leg of th
  • Haliastur is a genus of medium-sized diurnal birds of prey.
  • A Field Guide to the Birds of Australia was first published in 1980 by Co
  • It contains material concerning the wild birds of continental Africa, Indian Ocean islands we
  • visit the wet panne, while several species of birds of prey, most notably red-tailed hawks and nor
  • the List of areas of special significance for birds of Europe of Important Bird Area project, and
  • Pizzey & Frank Knight: The Field Guide to the Birds of Australia.
  • very closely related to these tropical forest birds of our time, but rather convergent.
  • See the birds of the sky, that they don't sow, neither
  • ation also published the Atlas of the Breeding Birds of Tennessee by Charles P. Nicholson (ISBN 087
  • Birds of Prey is a 1930 British mystery film directe
  • It had the aim of educating people about birds of prey and their value in the world.
  • There are several common birds of prey including red-tailed hawks, great horn
  • RSPB Complete Birds of Britain and Europe (revised and updated), D
  • Milvus is a genus of medium-sized birds of prey.
  • canyon temperatures make prey scarce, so many birds of prey migrate away.
  • l course is planned to be built near the men's Birds of Prey course at Beaver Creek.
  • f the remaining animals on the list are either birds of prey or birds living on water, and the majo
  • is lifetime, he caught and ringed over 400,000 birds of some 350 species in 18 countries.
  • Osmaston, A E (1913): The birds of Gorakhpur.
  • of this collection, and in 1872 he edited The Birds of Damara Land from the notes of his friend Ch
  • Other birds of prey threatening to the least weasel includ
  • as maintaining the most authoritative list of birds of Britain.
  • He wrote a List of the Insectivorous Birds of New South Wales (1897) and a Descriptive Ca
  • er family as a specialised zoo containing only birds of prey, including falcons, hawks, eagles and
  • The Birds of the District of Geelong, Australia.
  • New Guinea, and especially its Birds of Paradise and bowerbirds, kept drawing him b
  • The Birds of Australia birds first described in this wor
  • Pratt, H., Bruner, P & Berrett, D. (1987) The Birds of Hawaii and the Tropical Pacific Princeton U
  • e according to the Red Data Book of Threatened Birds of Asia.
  • eodopolopoudos in the television comedy series Birds of a Feather.
  • rom the Great Sparrow, but the Handbook of the Birds of the World recognises the Socotra Sparrow, K
  • He wrote The Game Birds of India, Burmah and Ceylon along with Allan O
  • dead were left exposed to the elements and to birds of prey, and Sheriar was often left in charge
  • me financial assistance for the publication of Birds of America.
  • ornithology through his monographs on various birds of the Scottish Highlands, as well as his othe
  • The birds of Taiwan are of an endemic subspecies.
  • en annually for an exceptional body of work on birds of the Western Hemisphere.
  • Birds of Australia
  • Birds of Tokyo (Independent)
  • Large birds of prey, such as Northern Goshawks, will take
  • Birds of Britain, 1907
  • algalornis was a genus of flightless predatory birds of the family Phorusrhacidae (often called "te
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