「flocks」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

flocks

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  • all groups, and may join multi-species feeding flocks after breeding season.
  • In winter, they are found in flocks along the coast from central New Jersey to the
  • ng bishops, who communicated the bull to their flocks along with messages which maintained the disti
  • he dark, received an offer to buy nine hundred flocks, although he would have had to pay immediately
  • aded Silverbill is gregarious, moving in small flocks and often mixing with African Silverbill.
  • "5 And also Lot, who went with Abram, had flocks and cattle and tents."
  • Fink was While humble shepherds watched their flocks and other rewritten passages (see illustration
  • The Griffon was used to guard flocks and hunt down predators, whilst the Brittany h
  • he valley of the Jordan, together with all his flocks; and I myself added more to them.
  • surface in marine environments, often in large flocks, and rarely comes to land except to breed, and
  • It often moves in flocks, and is very abundant.
  • The birds sometimes forage in flocks, apparently in an organised way.
  • the US Pacific coast, such stagings of migrant flocks appear to be rarer.
  • tton has good flavour and tenderness, and some flocks are reared exclusively as meat producers.
  • Registered flocks are now found in England, Ireland, Scotland an
  • Substantial sheep and goat flocks are also kept in the area.
  • r that most producers try to keep out of their flocks' bloodlines, unless they are purposely raising
  • Bank Mynas are gregarious foraging in flocks, breeding colonially and roosting together in
  • When they first arrive they are often in small flocks, but they soon split up and start pain formati
  • turkeys were a relative rarity among New World flocks, but Europeans heavily selected for this trait
  • early settlers came to the area to graze their flocks, but the first official records of it began in
  • They feed in pairs or small flocks by gleaning insects from foliage.
  • uite unlikely that Shepards were tending their flocks by night in December.
  • Christmas carol While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by night was first printed in A Supplement to
  • the tune set to While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night known as Old Foster, one of the more
  • sed on the carol While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night but with an alternative tune and extr
  • It became While Shepherds Watched Their Flocks by Night when it migrated to becoming a pub ca
  • o'er silent flocks by night,
  • "While Shepherds Watch Their Flocks By Night" - 5:33
  • It commonly occurs in small flocks, comprising 6-8 individuals.
  • idiosyncratic theory (Selous, 1931) that bird flocks coordinate their movements through a form of t
  • Leaving their flocks, draw nigh to gaze;
  • nal flames was used by shepherds to warm their flocks during winter.
  • Flocks fly in lines or "V" formations.
  • chickens are used most frequently on in small flocks for small farms.
  • and were once in the class of widespread large flocks for laying and meat production like the Leghor
  • Flocks forage on flats alongside rivers, flying into
  • In winter small flocks form.
  • tate was well known for its pedigree herds and flocks, fruit farm, poultry and flowers.
  • After nesting, North American birds move in flocks further north along the coasts, returning to w
  • The large flocks grazed the open downs by day and at dusk they
  • His flocks grew and by 1851 he had extensive pastoral lea
  • Within turkey flocks H. meleagridis is also known to be directly tr
  • onservation efforts in the 1970s; a handful of flocks have been exported abroad.
  • Many of them were shepherds watching their flocks in isolated fields.
  • rare, though it could still be found in small flocks in the higher forests.
  • ntil the Civil War destroyed most of the large flocks in the south.
  • production, egg quality, and profitability of flocks in their second or third laying seasons.
  • However, when they are transmitted between flocks in the eggs of H. gallinarum, a cecal nematode
  • They may form large flocks in fruiting trees, and travel some distances i
  • ur worked as a drover, trading the wool of his flocks in English markets.
  • found in pairs or small groups and form larger flocks in winter.
  • or small groups, and often join mixed-species flocks including Lesser Woodcreeper.
  • ghly sociable bird that often gathers in small flocks known as "coveys".
  • When not breeding, the flocks may number 50 or more.
  • Flocks near Vacherie, Louisiana were estimated to con
  • s highly gregarious when not breeding, forming flocks of up to 100 birds.
  • Duck by comparison is gregarious and can form flocks of thousands.
  • , fruits, seeds and insects, foraging in small flocks of 4 to 8 birds.
  • It can be employed to drive flocks of sheep or goats as well as herds of cattle o
  • This bird is usually found in pairs or small flocks of up to forty birds, often around water holes
  • Flocks of tens of thousands of these birds stop over
  • Flocks of the nominate western race have been found i
  • Flocks of seagulls and other scavenging estuarine bir
  • These starlings form flocks of 10-30 or more birds, and sometimes will mix
  • It occurs occasionally in flocks of other colours, but is now often maintained
  • ng by cutting sandalwood and shepherding small flocks of sheep.
  • At times, flocks of over 12,000 snow geese may be observed on t
  • as Striated Heron and Reed Cormorant and large flocks of others during migration.
  • Are you to have such flocks of sheep and such herds of cattle as no man ev
  • of the breeding season, tree swallows may form flocks of several thousand birds near roost sites.
  • The Koa also provided refuge for small flocks of the finch as it avoided people and the noon
  • rden warbler, heron and one of the UKs largest flocks of siskins.
  • From May to October there can be seen flocks of geese walk freely in the outfields, where t
  • nd a lot and are often seen flying, usually in flocks of at least ten or as many as a hundred or mor
  • In March and April, immense flocks of waders can be watched as they depart to the
  • r a throwing stick once used to disperse small flocks of birds, or a boomerang (but see Plaque secti
  • The site attracts flocks of fieldfares and redwings, which feed on the
  • is a reddleman; he travels the country marking flocks of sheep with a red mineral called "reddle", a
  • ws to 36 to 39 cm in length and congregates in flocks of up to several thousand birds, which often i
  • The park became so famous for its flocks of flamingos that it has been officially desig
  • Flocks of crossbills are regularly seen feeding in th
  • Some flocks of the same breed may be entirely free from ca
  • owned for its avifauna, particularly its large flocks of migratory waterfowl and wading birds.
  • row rapidly, causing anaemia in badly affected flocks of poultry.
  • lone, but from May to October they form linear flocks of several hundred, diving and surfacing seque
  • The White-crowned Parrot feeds in social flocks of 30-50 birds, which may wander outside the b
  • onbills and kingfishers can be seen, alongside flocks of ibis and white egrets in the pastures.
  • oking rundown and needed a facelift with large flocks of pigeons gathering in the area.
  • ass meadow now frequently grazed over by small flocks of sheep.
  • It is commonly found in flocks of maximum 20 birds, inhabiting savannas, wetl
  • As winter approaches flocks of pink footed geese and brent geese fly from
  • It is most often found in pairs or small noisy flocks of up to 10 individuals, but sometimes up to 3
  • Flocks of birdwatchers gather to observe the blaze of
  • are initiators as well as core species, mixed flocks of Tangara species - in particular Red-necked
  • It is not unusual to find flocks of wild turkey and deer roaming the greenways
  • he best routes and times to fly to avoid large flocks of birds.
  • ish charts - said to have been named for large flocks of White-crowned pigeons (Columba leucocephala
  • ern (1865), giving an account of the herds and flocks of Scotland, and Saddle and Sirloin (1870), tr
  • The Peppin is prevalent in the sheep flocks of Queensland, on the slopes and plains of New
  • an include objects such as schools of fish and flocks of birds as well as cytoskeletal filaments lik
  • d Jr (b1806), Riley exported the first of many flocks of Saxon merino sheep to Australia in the Sir
  • radar system that detects the arrival of large flocks of migratory birds and shuts down the turbines
  • Most spend the day in flocks of 5 to 12 birds, acrobatically climbing in tr
  • uals on Liangzihu lake, and only another three flocks of ten, eight, and three individuals at other
  • lia, is world renowned for its feeding of huge flocks of free-flying wild Rainbow Lorikeets, which c
  • Food is obtained in flocks of ten or more birds moving together on the gr
  • their wide borderings of deep green, the many flocks of water-fowl, hovering high above them, or se
  • nter, the non-breeding season, it forms larger flocks of as many as 30 birds, and joins flocks with
  • ally they live in pairs and sometimes roost in flocks of hundreds of individuals.
  • When food is plentiful, it may form flocks of up to 100 members.
  • Large flocks of redpoll and occasionally siskin feed on the
  • By 1833 he had one of the largest flocks of sheep in the colony.
  • It is held each fall to move the flocks off the mountain to their winter grazing homes
  • readily over lowland, and can form very large flocks, often with other gregarious swifts.
  • side of the nesting period, they often feed in flocks, often with other blackbirds.
  • utside of the breeding season fairy terns form flocks on the harbour, often around Tapora.
  • Hair flocks on his head right behind the ears look similar
  • gregarious in winter, sometimes forming large flocks on coastal mudflats or sandy beaches.
  • They will however form dense flocks on high tide roosts.
  • Also found in flocks or pairs in the mangroves, gorging on the frui
  • unal roosting is practiced by birds when large flocks or colonies roost together usually in trees wi
  • It often moves in small flocks or in mixed hunting parties.
  • This species can form large flocks outside the breeding season, sometimes mixed w
  • It will form flocks outside the breeding season, often mixed with
  • still open water, and is often found in small flocks over rivers or lakes when not breeding.
  • ng the non-breeding season they may form large flocks, possibly related to predator avoidance.
  • As of June 2011 there are over 750 Zwartbles flocks registered with the UK breed society plus many
  • It roosts communally at night, and coastal flocks roost at high tide.
  • Hanson, Linda, "Tending his Flocks: Sandstone Rabbi Cares for his animals at home
  • Mixed flocks stay together because the chickadees call out
  • The majority of flocks still live and thrive on the moor to this day.
  • In flight, it joins mixed-species flocks that include orioles, jays, tanagers, and othe
  • licit warning calls from mixed-species feeding flocks that cross its path even in open cerrado habit
  • es and sod farms because of decimation of bird flocks that congregated in these areas.
  • Flocks that are slaughtered after a single laying sea
  • Though it sometimes joins mixed-species flocks, the Red Warbler is more typically found alone
  • On the next morning, the farmer sold the flocks to someone else at three times the promised pr
  • an important drovers' way for Fountains Abbey flocks to summer pasture on higher ground, approximat
  • birds, though they sometimes gather in larger flocks to exploit a major food supply such as an ant
  • They migrate in flocks to Central and northern South America.
  • They migrate in flocks to the southern United States and northern Sou
  • birds while flying, which often serve to keep flocks together.
  • These birds often forage in flocks, usually flying relatively high but sometimes
  • He stated that upon the hills nearer Wales the flocks were without horns and had white faces.
  • e of their flavorful meat most of the Southern flocks were wiped out during the Civil War.
  • The Tunis popularity spread quickly and flocks were started primarily on the East coast and N
  • It forms small flocks when not breeding.
  • on, by January, the birds gather into foraging flocks, which are noisily on the move until the pairs
  • It flies in loose flocks which cross the sea on a broad front rather th
  • Flocks will occasionally fly to neighbouring islands
  • in length, gregarious and often encountered in flocks, with brown upperparts and its head and breast
  • Japanese Waxwings often occur in mixed flocks with Bohemian Waxwings which, as well as havin
  • It will join winter tit flocks with other species.
  • It will join mixed-species feeding flocks with other Fijian birds, including Silvereyes.
  • They often migrate in huge flocks with other species of birds.