vandrefalk.dk
Vandrefalk.dk - Links
http://www.vandrefalk.dk/links.shtml
Udvalgte links til andre websites. Dansk Ornitologisk Forening (om vandrefalken i Danmark). Skov- og Naturstyrelsen (om vandrefalken i Danmark). Projekt Pilgrimsfalk (Naturskyddsföreningen i Sverige). Http:/ da.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vandrefalk. Http:/ en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peregrine Falcon. GeoCenter Møns Klint (om vandrefalkene på Møns Klint). Http:/ www.moensklint.dk/geocentermoensklintdk/natur/vandrefalk-2011.aspx. Zoologi.snm.ku.dk. ArcticRaptors (bl.a. med blog om feltarbejde).
blog.arcticraptors.ca
ArcticRaptors.ca Blog: Calendar Birds
http://blog.arcticraptors.ca/2012/04/calendar-birds.html
Tuesday, April 17, 2012. For arctic nesting Peregrine Falcons we know that late arrival. Male ground squirrels are among the first resident prey to appear in the spring. Snow Buntings are almost always the first migrant prey, often arriving ahead of peregrines (G.Court). A falcon known as Island Girl (see Falcon Research Group Blog. That winters in Chile and spends her summers on Baffin Island, Nunavut began her inward migration April 14, 2012. Her departure date in each of the 4 migration years that she...
blog.arcticraptors.ca
ArcticRaptors.ca Blog: September 2010
http://blog.arcticraptors.ca/2010_09_01_archive.html
Wednesday, September 29, 2010. Joe's Hag Heads South. Joe's Hag left her breeding cliff in the 3rd week of September and started south for a yet-to-be-determined wintering location somewhere on the South American continent.maybe through Padre Island in the middle of October again as she did last year. Southward, first stop South Hampton Island. For some, one storm interrupts a breeding attempt completely. The landscape below Joe's Hag's cliff (photo B. Robinson). Wednesday, September 29, 2010. This breed...
blog.arcticraptors.ca
ArcticRaptors.ca Blog: June 2012
http://blog.arcticraptors.ca/2012_06_01_archive.html
Saturday, June 23, 2012. Fp anatundrium and F.p. tundriassini? Of course there's no such thing as F.p. anatundrium. Or Fp tundriassini,. But for a little fun and to emphasize variation in plumage within sub-species even at small scales, I thought I'd post some images of 2 birds that were trapped one after the other at our study area in Rankin Inlet this spring, and assign an "invented" sub-specific name to them based on appearance and breeding range. A fourth sub-species ( F.p. cassini. Photo: Miguel Sag...
blog.arcticraptors.ca
ArcticRaptors.ca Blog: May 2011
http://blog.arcticraptors.ca/2011_05_01_archive.html
Sunday, May 1, 2011. The "Hag" is coming. Time, technology and luck have broadened our view of the "Hag's" life in ways that the critically important, but brief encounter with her on the beaches of South Padre Island in mid-October 2009 could never do. The "Flats" of Padre (photo: P. Andreano). One of the "Hag's" neighbors on a full clutch. Looking north from Colombia to Panama and Costa Rica. Still frozen spring conditions ( Photo:B.Robinson. Soon thereafter, with the sun positioned higher on the horizo...
blog.arcticraptors.ca
ArcticRaptors.ca Blog: June 2013
http://blog.arcticraptors.ca/2013_06_01_archive.html
Sunday, June 2, 2013. Coincidence - maybe not. Watching “Island Girl” (a female Peregrine Falcon tagged by FRG. In 2009) migrate northward for the 5th consecutive year, it's difficult not to be charmed by her. By combining efforts across research teams, she and other PTT- or otherwise-tagged birds have disclosed a few more of the nifty migratory tricks used by peregrines flying to and from the breeding grounds. Sunday, June 02, 2013. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Coincidence - maybe not.
blog.arcticraptors.ca
ArcticRaptors.ca Blog: ...some don't
http://blog.arcticraptors.ca/2011/12/some-dont.html
Friday, December 30, 2011. Although early arrival at a breeding cliff can be risky, it has its benefits too.there's usually no objection from other potential breeders, at least for a while. Eventually though there's conflict at some level. Most often disputes are short, vocal and without contact. On occasion though a brouhaha ends in injury or worse. 7 H captured with leg injury in 2005, returned to breed in 2006 (A. Franke). Territory holder 03 B killed by intruder in 2007 (A. Franke). Barry Robinson ba...
blog.arcticraptors.ca
ArcticRaptors.ca Blog: March 2012
http://blog.arcticraptors.ca/2012_03_01_archive.html
Sunday, March 25, 2012. For many bird species clutch size increases with latitude, yet throughout their range peregrines (migrants and residents alike) normally lay 4 eggs. A clutch of 4 eggs is normal throughout peregrine range. Those that breed at relatively southern latitudes have the luxury of time (more than 200 days) and very mild breeding conditions, even to the point that a breeding season can be salvaged by laying a second clutch of eggs if the first is lost. Early hatched (July 9),. Link to Arc...
blogs.peregrinefund.org
The Peregrine Fund Notes From The Field
http://blogs.peregrinefund.org/author/89
Notes from the Field" provides frequent updates and pictures from our biologists and students who are working in the field or at our headquarters, the World Center for Birds of Prey. Found 1 entries matching your request:. Flooded scrapes and drenched young. Mdash; 05 January 2012. Mdash; in Arctic Raptors and Climate Change Project. Find more articles about ,. A Leopard Hunts an Impala in Kenya's Maasai Mara. Have Condor, Will Travel. A Successful Hatching in Punta Cana for Ridgway 's Hawks. Project com...
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