Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Basic_R - Rare Birds
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 9     161-180 of 184    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Rare Birds:     more books (100)
  1. Rare Bird of Fashion: The Irreverent Iris Apfel by Eric Boman, Iris Apfel, 2007-03-09
  2. Rare Encounters with Ordinary Birds by Lyanda Lynn Haupt, 2004-06-14
  3. Rare Bird: Pursuing the Mystery of the Marbled Murrelet by Maria Mudd Ruth, 2005-06-04
  4. Rare Birds by Edward Riche, 2002-03
  5. A Field Guide to the Rare Birds of Britain and Europe (Collins Field Guide) by Ian Lewington, 1991-11
  6. Rare and Elusive Birds of North America by William Burt, 2001-10-19
  7. Another Field Guide to Little Known and Seldom Seen Birds of North America by Ben Sill, Cathryn Sill, 1990-03
  8. Rare Birds by Sophie Dahl, Marc Jacobs, 2005-09-30
  9. Rare Birds Yearbook 2008: The World's 189 Most Threatened Birds
  10. Red Data Birds in Britain: Action for Rare, Threatened, and Important Species
  11. Rare Birds of the West Coast of North America by Don Roberson, Donna Dittman, et all 1980-12
  12. Rare and Endangered Biota of Florida: Vol. V. Birds (Rare and Endangered Biota of Florida)
  13. Rare Birds: An American Family by Dan Bessie, 2000-11
  14. Rare Birds by Jo N. Walker, 2001-10

161. Wisconsin Society For Ornithology
Birding news, rare bird alerts, events, publications, programs and projects, checklist, and bookstore.
http://www.uwgb.edu/birds/wso/
Wisconsin's Premiere Birding Organization
The Wisconsin Society for Ornithology was organized in 1939 to encourage the study of Wisconsin birds. The aims have since expanded to emphasize all of the many enjoyable aspects of birding and to support the research and habitat protection necessary to preserve Wisconsin birdlife. WSO strives to alert members and the public to situations and practices that threaten Wisconsin's bird populations. Members in the Wisconsin Society for Ornithology include those who enjoy birds attracted to their homes by feeders and bird houses, those who pursue field study or bird banding as a hobby, and those who engage in ornithology professionally. Membership exceeds 1500 from across the United States and around the world.
General Contact:

Christine Reel, WSO Treasurer
2022 Sherryl Lane
Waukesha, WI 53188-3142
wso1939@hotmail.com
Jennifer Davis
WSO Web Administrator
wso@uwgb.edu
WSO Web Site Contact Last Edit Date: September 13, 2005

162. Illinois & Chicago Birding
Urs Geiser's comprehensive birding site, with checklists, rare bird alerts, and resources.
http://home.xnet.com/~ugeiser/Birds/
Chicago/Illinois Birding Information IBET info transcript General Chicago Information DuPage Birding Club Hotlines: DuPage Chicago Warblings
a changing feature Birding Pages in Neighboring States (WI, IA, IN, MI, MO, KY) World Bird Trip Report Collection Miscellaneous Bird-related Stuff General Birding Links
Chicago and Northwest Indiana Birders tune their Family Radios to Channel 11, code 22. (Terminology of the latter varies with brand.)
Welcome to my Birding Home Page
I really would like feedback on this project. If you like what you see here, or if you want to criticize something (bugs? - not me!), please let me know, e.g. by sending
Warblings
This column features various Illinois birding news and items of interest, also announcements about this web site. I hope to change the content reasonably often, so check back soon. Sorry, this isn't really Illinois-related. I recently returned from a trip to Florida. A selection of mostly bird pictures can be seen here
[June 13, 2005] Archive of older "Warblings"
Chicago Area and Illinois Birding Information
Documents stored on this server have bold links. The others are links to external websites.

163. NARBA Bird Sightings
NARBA Bird Sightings Sample Report. This is a February 4th bird sightingupdate of NARBA, the North American rare Bird Alert sponsored by the Houston
http://www.narba.org/sample.htm
BIRD SIGHTING INFORMATION
Changes last made on: 10:09:00 February 5, 1997 This is a February 4th bird sighting update of NARBA, the North American Rare Bird Alert sponsored by the Houston Audubon Society. Thanks for all your sighting feedback on the bird report line; 1-800-458-BIRD Birds on today's on today's tape include; SIBERIAN ACCENTOR, APLOMADO FALCON, STREAK-BACKED ORIOLE, KELP GULL, BLACK-TAILED GULL, IVORY GULL, BLUE BUNTING, MASKED DUCK, MASKED BOOBY, BOREAL and northern owls, EMPEROR GOOSE, YELLOW-BILLED LOON, RUDDY GROUND-DOVES, GYRFALCON, and TUFTED DUCKS. The SIBERIAN ACCENTOR near Hailey, Idaho continued on January 31st. The GYRFALCONS near Gannett, Idaho also continued on January 31st. The APLOMADO FALCON continued in southwestern New Mexico on February 3rd just north of mile marker 12. The STREAK-BACKED ORIOLE in Bartlett Park in Huntington Beach, California continued February 1st. The KELP GULL in Galveston, Texas continued on February 1st. The BLACK-TAILED GULL at the Chesapeake Bay - Bridge Tunnel was seen the evening of February 1st at Island #4. It was associating with a flock of Ring-billed Gulls. A YELLOW-LEGGED GULL was seen at Cape Hatteras Point, North Carolina on February 1st.

164. CNN.com - Expert Questions Existence Of Ivory-billed Woodpecker
An expert on the ivorybilled woodpecker is questioning evidence that purportedlyshows the rare bird, once thought to be extinct, in the swamps of
http://www.cnn.com/2005/TECH/science/07/22/woodpecker.question.ap/

165. Business 2.0 :: Magazine Article :: What's Cool :: A Rare Bird Indeed
It s not easy getting your hands on a Morgan Aero 8. But if you re one of thelucky few, you ll be flying through the streets in a roadster unlike any
http://www.business2.com/b2/web/articles/0,17863,1086688,00.html
Try an Issue Free Magazine Customer Service Subscribe to Business 2.0 Search B2 Home Current Issue Magazine Archive Web Guide ... Subscribe to B2
A Rare Bird Indeed It's not easy getting your hands on a Morgan Aero 8. But if you're one of the lucky few, you'll be flying through the streets in a roadster unlike any other.
By John Tayman, July 27, 2005 When one is seated in the open-air berth of the 2006 Morgan Aero 8, one's face is at precisely the same height as the sharpened beak and beady eyes of the Pavo cristatus, a.k.a. the Indian peafowl. Of course, knowing such a detail is useful only if you actually happen to be behind the wheel of one of the hard-to-get Aeros, and then only if confronted by a vividly livid peacock, intent on removing your eyes. Which I recently was. The fowl was patrolling the dirt lane descending from the garage of Isis Imports, one of the few firms importing the British-made car. Thus to test-drive an Aero 8 requires traveling to Isis's headquarters in rural Bodega, Calif., nipping into the car's slender cockpit, firing the 325-horsepower engine, and cautiously steering said Aero down the bumpy road. Whereupon you will be attacked by peacocks, which serve as Isis's sentries. When the flock's alpha male saw me escaping in a glittering silver Aero 8, he rushed to block my exit, angrily displaying his fan of blue-green feathers. Morgan Aero 8 Price (as tested): Body type: Two-door coupe Weight: 5,541 lbs.

166. Birding In New York
Recent transcripts for 6 RBAs throughout the state.
http://www.virtualbirder.com/vbirder/realbirds/rbas/NY.html
The Virtual Birder
Birding Break
Chincoteague
OnLocation
Chincoteague
Backgrounder
Chincoteague
Gallery
Waterfowl
B-Mail
Real Birds Virginia
Prizes
Media Shelf Watching Sparrows
Birding in New York
Ontario Quebec
Connecticut
Massachusetts ... Publications
New York Rare Bird Alert

167. Rare Bird Alert Telephone Numbers ~ Resources ~ ABA
Birding organization that helps birders increase bird ID and birdfinding skills,enjoyment of birdwatching, and bird conservation involvement.
http://www.americanbirding.org/publications/wgrbaadd.htm
Store Membership Publications Programs ... Home RESOURCES Net Connections
Travel
Birding
Pelagic Trips

RBA Numbers
...
Training Courses

Beginning Birding
What's that bird
Where to go Field guides Binocular basics
North American Rare Bird Alert Telephone Listing
Most RBAs are now available on the internet (see www.birdingonthe.net/birdmail.html ). But telephone hotlines remain a valuable birding resource, particularly for traveling birders and others without easy access to a computer. We urge the continuation of telephone RBA service, and ask that hotline administrators advise the editor of any updates, corrections, or additions to the list. Many thanks to compilers, administrators, and contributors for their help in compiling and distributing information bird sightings in their regions! Alabama
Statewide (256) 751-4788
South (850) 934-6974 Alaska
Upper Cook Inlet (907) 338-2473
Fairbanks (907) 451-9213 Kachemak Bay (907) 235-7337 Seward (907) 224-2325 Alberta Calgary (403) 221-4519 Edmonton (780) 433-2473 Arizona Southeast Arizona (520) 798-1005 Arkansas Statewide (501) 753-5853 British Columbia Vancouver (604) 737-3074 Victoria (250) 592-3381 California Northwest (707) 822-5666 Los Angeles (323) 874-1318 Monterey (831) 626-6605 Morro Bay (805) 528-7182 Northern Calif. (415) 681-7422

168. ASNH Rare Bird Alert
the New Hampshire rare Bird Alert is also posted to the NH. This is NewHampshire Audubon’s rare Bird Alert for Friday, August 5th, 2005.
http://www.nhaudubon.org/rarebird.htm
Return to Birding
Weekly Rare Bird Alert
this page contains weekly rare bird reports for New Hampshire for at least the most recent four weeks. You can also keep track of past sightings in our Rare Bird Alert Archives . At the end of each month, the data for the previous month is moved to the archives. PLEASE NOTE THE FOLLOWING ADDITIONAL POSTINGS:
  • the New Hampshire Rare Bird Alert is also posted to the NH.Birds list serve.
  • the New Hampshire RBA and other New England RBAs are posted to BIRDEAST
  • In addition to the archives, the current New Hampshire RBA is on the Virtual Birder web site (through its posting to NH.Birds) as are other states' rare bird alerts.
Please read about Birding Ethics , a good thing to keep in mind while you are out looking for those rare birds.
Week of 9/23/05
This is New Hampshire Audubon’s Rare Bird Alert for Friday, September 23, 2005. On September 17th, a LITTLE GULL was seen from Pulpit Rocks in Rye, along with 86 COMMON TERNS, 13 LAUGHING GULLS, and 2 NORTHERN GANNETS. On September 22nd, in Hebron, 2 SANDHILL CRANES were reported from near the north end of Newfound Lake at the confluence of the Cockermouth River and Wise Brook.

169. Join The Rare Bird Club
The rare Bird Club is for keen birders, conservationists and nature lovers fromall over the globe, who gather for birding trips, fundraising events and to
http://www.birdlife.org/how_to_help/rare_bird_club/
@import url(../../styles.css); Tips How to Help only Home Home BirdLife Worldwide National Partners ... Donate to BirdLife
Funds are urgently needed to help us with our work. If you can help, please consider giving a donation. Home How to Help
Join the Rare Bird Club
Who we are
The Rare Bird Club is for keen birders, conservationists and nature lovers from all over the globe, who gather for birding trips, fundraising events and to share their love of wildlife and the natural environment. People also join because they care about the future of the planet and know that being a Rare Bird Club member and supporting BirdLife International makes a difference in species survival.
How it began
The Rare Bird Club was established in 1988 by BirdLife International with the late Prince Bernhard of the Netherlands as its Honorary President and Jane Fenton as the current Vice-President. Today there are more than 400 members from 40 different countries. The club is seeking a member for each of the 1200 or so threatened bird species on the planet, so we are already a third of the way there.
Who benefits
Without this support, many of BirdLife International's past achievements would not have been possible.

170. Rare Bird Club Paintings & Merchandise
New rare Bird Club members adopt a bird from the official BirdLife InternationalRed List of globally threatened species and receive a painting of their
http://www.birdlife.org/how_to_help/rare_bird_club/rbcpaintings.html
@import url(../../styles.css); Tips How to Help only Home Home BirdLife Worldwide National Partners ... BirdLife News Alerts
Sign up to receive free email alerts about the latest news on the BirdLife web site. Or change your current News Alerts settings. Home How to Help Join the Rare Bird Club
Rare Bird Club paintings
Chris Rose A specially-commissioned Rare Bird Club painting of a Slender-billed Curlew – probably Europe's rarest bird
Zoom In
New Rare Bird Club members 'adopt' a bird from the official BirdLife International Red List of globally threatened species and receive a painting of their chosen species by a recognized wildlife artist - see example.
Rare Bird Club gifts and merchandise
A range of Club gifts and merchandise is available for purchase:
  • An elegant Hermès Club tie in teal-coloured silk with Blue Bird of Paradise motif and Rare Bird Club label.
  • Hand-painted enamel ladies’ pin of Blue Bird-of-paradise (rounded approx 3 cm by 2 cm)
  • Silver hand-made brooch of Blue Bird-of-paradise made at Dana in Jordan.
  • There are still some dark blue club ties remaining
  • Greetings cards of your Rare Bird Club painting: minimum order 350
Please contact the Rare Bird Club if you would like to order any of the above.

171. Cricket Bird
rare South American bird sings with its feathers to attract a mate, Cornellresearcher finds. By Krishna Ramanujan
http://www.news.cornell.edu/stories/July05/Cricketbird.kr.html
EMBARGOED UNTIL THURSDAY, JULY 28, 2005, at 2 P.M. EDT Rare South American bird 'sings' with its feathers to attract a mate, Cornell researcher finds By Krishna Ramanujan ITHACA, N.Y. Hummingbirds and rattlesnakes move parts of their bodies at amazing speeds. But male club-winged manakins colorful, sparrow-sized South American birds have them both beat, vibrating their wings at more than 100 cycles per second, twice the speed of hummingbirds. The bird uses this unprecedented feat not for fight or flight, but to impress females with its violinlike hum.
Kimberly Bostwick Similar to how a cricket chirps by rubbing together sound-making apparatus in its wings, male club-winged manakins ( Machaeropterus deliciosus ) use specially adapted feathers in each wing to make a tone, according to a Cornell University ornithologist in the July 29 issue of Science. The sound and how the bird produces it are unique among vertebrates. "Essentially an instrument has evolved in this species, in this case a refined instrument," said Kimberly Bostwick, the paper's lead author, a curator in the birds and mammals division of Cornell's Museum of Vertebrates and a research associate in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. The club-winged manakin, found only in a strip of threatened cloud forest on the western slopes of the Andes Mountains along the extreme northwest corner of Ecuador extending into Colombia, has adapted its wings in this odd way due to sexual selection the sound makes the male more attractive to females of the species.

172. Southeast Arizona Rare Bird Alert--Tucson Audubon Society
You can listen to the recorded version of this rare Bird Alert at (520) 7981005 . This update of Tucson Audubon Society s rare Bird Alert for southeast
http://www.tucsonaudubon.org/birding/seazrba.htm
Home Birding
Access updates
Current RBA
... Access Updates RBA Dastardly Duos AZ/NM Listserv Tucson Area Tucson Audubon Society
Southeast Arizona Rare Bird Alert
Compiled by Keith Kamper Report Sightings
Please report your sightings to the voice mailbox at (520) 798-1005 x2 or e-mail them to keith_kamper@comcast.net . You can listen to the recorded version of this Rare Bird Alert at the same number. Directions to Birding Sites
Where directions are not given, they can be found in the newest edition of Finding Birds in Southeast Arizona , published by and available from Tucson Audubon Nature Shop . Changes in site access since the publication of this guide can be found by going to our Finding Birds in Southeast Arizona updates page Methodology of this Report
The sequence of sightings in this report is not random. Species are listed by order of overall rarity within locality. The first locality mentioned contains the rarest species seen during the reporting period. Within that locality, species are mentioned in relative-rarity order or in taxonomic order, if relative rarity is the same, within sub-locality. When the sightings for a locality are complete, the rarest remaining species dictates which locality is mentioned next, and so forth. At any point when 2 or more species are of the same relative rarity, taxonomic order then determines the sequence in which the localities are covered. Consequently, the order in which localities are mentioned will vary from one report to the next.

173. Welcome To The BNHS Website
Adopt A rare Bird. BNHS in partnership with BirdLife International and Mr.Balkrishnan joined AdoptA-rare-Bird programme to save the Imperial Eagle.
http://www.bnhs.org/article.php?cid=Njk=&sid=MTE1&aid=MTM1&t=Mg==

174. Rare Bird 'sings' With Its Feathers To Attract A Mate
Similar to how a cricket chirps by rubbing together soundmaking apparatus inits hind legs, male club-winged manakins ( i Machaeropterus deliciosus /i )
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2005-07/cuns-rb072605.php
Public release date: 28-Jul-2005
E-mail Article

Contact: Blaine P. Friedlander Jr.
bpf2@cornell.edu

Cornell University News Service
Rare bird 'sings' with its feathers to attract a mate
ITHACA, N.Y. Hummingbirds and rattlesnakes move parts of their bodies at amazing speeds. But male club-winged manakins colorful, sparrow-sized South American birds have them both beat, vibrating their wings at more than 100 cycles per second, twice the speed of hummingbirds. The bird uses this unprecedented feat not for fight or flight, but to impress females with its violinlike hum. Similar to how a cricket chirps by rubbing together sound-making apparatus in its wings, male club-winged manakins ( Machaeropterus deliciosus ) use specially adapted feathers in each wing to make a tone, according to a Cornell University ornithologist in the July 29 issue of Science. The sound and how the bird produces it are unique among vertebrates. "Essentially an instrument has evolved in this species, in this case a refined instrument," said Kimberly Bostwick, the paper's lead author, a curator in the birds and mammals division of Cornell's Museum of Vertebrates and a research associate in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. The club-winged manakin, found only in a strip of threatened cloud forest on the western slopes of the Andes Mountains along the extreme northwest corner of Ecuador extending into Colombia, has adapted its wings in this odd way due to sexual selection the sound makes the male more attractive to females of the species.

175. Seattle Audubon Society | Rare Bird Alerts
Contact the rare Bird Alert hotlines to report new sightings or learn the lateston Northwest rarities.
http://www.seattleaudubon.org/birding.cfm?id=115

176. Linnaean Society Of New York Rare Bird Alert For The New York City Area
An upto-the-minute rare Bird Alert, describes on a frequently updated recordedmessage hotline New York City Area rare Bird Alert number 212-979-3070
http://www.linnaeansociety.org/03-04pages/RBA.html
LLL TOP OF PAGE
New York City Rare Bird Alert
Sponsored by The Linnaean Society of New York and The National Audubon Society.
The list below will be updated weekly.
An up-to-the-minute Rare Bird Alert, describes on a frequently updated recorded message
unusual birds seen in the Greater New York area.
Telephone: 212-979-3070
RBA
* New York
* New York City, Long Island, Westchester County
* January 7, 2005 - Transcript hotline: New York City Area Rare Bird Alert number: 212-979-3070 to report sightings call: - Tom Burke (212) 297-4804 on weekdays - Tony Lauro (631) 734-4126 for Long Island compiler: Tom Burke coverage: New York City, Long Island, Westchester County transcriber: Andrew Guthrie BEGIN TAPE Greetings! This is the New York RBA for Friday, January 7th at 4 p.m. The highlights of today's tape are BOREAL OWL, TOWNSEND'S SOLITAIRE, HARRIS'S SPARROW, COMMON MURRE and DOVEKIE, CACKLING and GREATER WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE, BARROW'S GOLDENEYE, BLACK-HEADED GULL, and more.

177. Bird News - Fuglafréttir / Birding Iceland
The following information is mainly obtained from the Icelandic Bird Net and a very rare Icelandic breeding record for this annual vagrant.
http://www.hi.is/~yannk/birdnews.html
Home Birding Iceland Where can I see...? Bird Photos Rare Bird News Links
The latest Icelandic bird news
Last update... 23 September 2005 18:20 The following information is mainly obtained from the Icelandic Bird Net and www.fuglar.is
and has not been reviewed by the Icelandic Rarities Committee.
Letters in ( ) indicate where in Iceland the location is (SW=South-West etc).
Fri, 23 September 2005:
The Eurasian Spoonbill Platalea leucorodia has been relocated near Breiðdalsvík (E) - 5th for Iceland . A Common Kestrel Falco tinnunculus at Skálar/Berufjörður (E).
- Updated by Yann Kolbeinsson Thu, 22 September 2005:
A Eurasian Spoonbill Platalea leucorodia was discovered at Breiðdalsvík (E) - 5th for Iceland . Still the drake Green-winged Teal Anas carolinensis at Seltjarnarnes (SW) where a juvenile Little Gull Larus minutus was found. One Common Crossbill Loxia curvirostra at Höfn (SE).
- Updated by Yann Kolbeinsson Wed, 21 September 2005:
The Canada Goose Branta canadensis remains at Garður (SW) along with the drake American Black Duck Anas rubripes . A drake Green-winged Teal Anas carolinensis at Daltjörn/Seltjarnarnes (SW). A juvenile

178. Audubon: America's Rare Bird
A new biography tells how the foreignborn frontiersman became one of the 19thcentury s greatest wildlife artists and a patron saint of the ecology
http://www.smithsonianmag.si.edu/smithsonian/issues04/dec04/audubon.html
document.write('');
National Audubon Society
Audubon: America's Rare Bird A new biography tells how the foreign-born frontiersman became one of the 19th century's greatest wildlife artists and a patron saint of the ecology movement John James Audubon was born Jean Rabin, his father's bastard child, in 1785 on Saint Domingue (soon to be renamed Haiti). His mother was a 27-year-old French chambermaid, Jeanne Rabin, who died of an infection within months of his birth. The stirrings of slave rebellion on the island in 1791 prompted Jean Audubon to sell what he could of his holdings and ship his son home to France. Though Jean Audubon was an officer in the Revolutionary French Navy, he and his family were dungeoned during the Reign of Terror that followed the French Revolution. In 1803, Jean Audubon sent his handsome, excitable son off to America to escape conscription in the Napoleonic Wars. The generation of Americans that the young French émigré was joining was different from its parents'. It was migrating westward and taking great risks in pursuit of new opportunities its elders had not enjoyed. And no life was at once more unusual and yet more representative of that expansive era when a national character emerged than Audubon's, as Pulitzer-Prize winner Richard Rhodes explains in his new book, John James Audubon: The Making of an American In John James Audubon's new homeland, he married an extraordinary woman, opened a string of general stores on the Kentucky frontier and built a great steam mill on the Ohio River. He explored the American wilderness from Galveston Bay to Newfoundland, hunted with Cherokee and Osage, rafted the Ohio and the Mississippi.

179. The Isles Of Scilly Bird Group Web Site Provides Information And The Latest News
Information and the latest news about birds and birding on the Scilly Isles.Includes section on pelagics, photo gallery, and tour schedule.
http://www.scillybirding.co.uk/
The Isles of Scilly Bird Group web site provides information and the latest news about birds on Scilly, birding on the
islands, and the activities and interests of the Isles of Scilly Bird Group. It aims to support all birders interested in Scilly birding as well as those intending to visit the islands. This web site uses frames but your browser does not support them. Use the links below for a non-frame version. Isles of Scilly, Scilly Isles, Isles of Scilly Bird Group, Scilly birding, pelagics, rare birds, rare bird photographs, wildlife tours, bird news, UK birding, Isles of Scilly, Scilly Isles, Isles of Scilly Bird Group, Scilly birding, pelagics, rare birds, rare bird photographs, wildlife tours, bird news, UK birding, Isles of Scilly, Scilly Isles, Isles of Scilly Bird Group, Scilly birding, pelagics, rare birds, rare bird photographs, wildlife tours, bird news, UK birding, Isles of Scilly, Scilly Isles, Isles of Scilly Bird Group, Scilly birding, pelagics, rare birds, rare bird photographs, wildlife tours, bird news, UK birding

180. Rare Bird Alert — Audubon Society Of Portland
rare Bird Alert. Document Actions. Email this page Print this page.rare Bird Alert. August 4, 2005. Compiled by Harry Nehls
http://www.audubonportland.org/science/rba/document_view
Search
  • Home About Volunteer Donate ... Living with Wildlife Navigation Rare Bird Alert Red Tree Vole Surveys White-headed Woodpecker Research Black Swift Inventory Bonnie Butte Raptor Project Caspian Terns: Columbia River Bird Research Peregrine Watch Audubon Pond Amphibian Survey Field Notes Bird Checklists Plants for Wildlife PNW Plants for Bees Gardening for Butterflies Resources Renewable Energy Bio-blitz Oregon Birding Hotspots Bird Counts Bird of the Month: Black Rosy-Finch Audiences Nature Store Portlet
    Home
    Science Rare Bird Alert
    Rare Bird Alert
    Document Actions Rare Bird Alert September 22, 2005 Compiled by Harry Nehls G. White-fronted Goose  COOK’S PETREL  American White Pelican  BLACK VULTURE Broad-winged Hawk  Sandhill Crane Pacific Golden-Plover Sanderling  Dunlin
     Buff-breasted Sandpiper  Sabine’s Gull  Black-chinned Hummingbird Black Phoebe Gray Catbird TENNESSEE WARBLER CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER Palm Warbler BLACK-AND-WHITE WARBLER Swainson’s thrush  BLUE-WINGED WARBLER VIRGINIA’S WARBLER
    PRAIRIE WARBLER BLACKPOLL WARBLER
    On September 16 and 20 COOK’S PETRELS were reported well off the southern Oregon coast. A probable BLACK VULTURE was seen with TURKEY VULTURES September 11 near Hubbard, and September 13 near Oregon City. On September 17 a CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER was near Astoria. A BLACK-AND-WHITE WARBLER was in Vancouver September 17.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 9     161-180 of 184    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | 6  | 7  | 8  | 9  | 10  | Next 20

free hit counter