kachemakbaybirders.org
Links and Contacts – Kachemak Bay Birders
http://kachemakbaybirders.org/links
It's a Great Day to Bird. It's a Great Day to Bird. It's a Great Day to Bird. It's a Great Day to Bird. Kachemak Bay Bird Checklist. Kachemak Bay Birding email list. Alerts, Sightings, and discussion. AK Birding (Yahoo Group). EBird Rare Bird Alerts. Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network. ALASKA GREBE AND LOON MONITORING. Http:/ accs.uaa.alaska.edu/zoology/alaska-loon-grebe-monitoring/. ALASKA MARITIME NATIONAL WILDLIFE REFUGE. Https:/ www.fws.gov/refuge/Alaska Maritime/. CORNELL LAB OF ORNITHOLOGY.
alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com
Alaska Sandhill Crane Blog: October 2012
http://alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com/2012_10_01_archive.html
Monday, October 1, 2012. Is crane dance innate or learned? Crane dance is iconic. All 15 species of crane communicate with elaborate body language. Comparisons among species reveals clear and consistent distinctions. Do species differences in dance prove crane displays are innate? We think the question is inappropriate and based on a false dichotomy. Animal behavior was validated as "real science" when the 1973 Nobel prize in Physiology went to Karl von Frisch, Konrad Lorenz, and Nikolaas Tinbergen.
alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com
Alaska Sandhill Crane Blog: January 2010
http://alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com/2010_01_01_archive.html
Saturday, January 30, 2010. Crane brains and behaviors 1 - the evolutionary legacy. Crane brains control crane behavior. To. The present-day crane brain, we need to appreciate its evolution. Cranes are members of Gruiformes - an ancient order of. Birds One chicken-sized gruiform (fossil to the right) lived 30 million years ago on the grasslands of present-day France. Posted by Christy Yuncker and George Happ. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Search this blog and companion websites. Focuses...
alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com
Alaska Sandhill Crane Blog: June 2010
http://alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com/2010_06_01_archive.html
Sunday, June 20, 2010. Twin colts hatched in 2010. Roy and Millie returned to their Goldstream Valley cranberry bog and its snow-covered frozen pond on April 22 - Earth Day. The pair soon began exploratory nest building (left) and then started serious incubation as the snow fell lightly on May 4 (photo right). We have seen cranes on this pond for 15 years. 2010 is the 10. Posted by Christy Yuncker and George Happ. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Search this blog and companion websites.
alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com
Alaska Sandhill Crane Blog: March 2011
http://alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com/2011_03_01_archive.html
Tuesday, March 15, 2011. Best books - Sandhill Cranes in the Great Plains and elsewhere. Sandhill and Whooping Cranes:. Ancient Voices over America's Wetlands. By Paul A. Johnsgard. Bison Books of the University of Nebraska Press [published 2011] and. The Sandhill Cranes of North America. By Michael Forsberg [published 2004]. The spring staging of Sandhill Cranes in the shallows of the Platte River in Nebraska ranks among the great mass migratory events on the globe. That updates his classic Crane Music.
alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com
Alaska Sandhill Crane Blog: Eurasian Crane Displays - Trandans & Tranbeteende
http://alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com/2015/04/eurasian-crane-displays-trandans.html
Wednesday, April 8, 2015. Eurasian Crane Displays - Trandans and Tranbeteende. Carl Christian Tofte and Jessica Lee Hjort have created a fascinating and altogether lovely guide to the behaviors of Eurasian Cranes. On their staging grounds near Pulken, Sweden. This is an important resource for crane behavioral biologists. Carl Christian's meticulous and stunning artistry depicts individual postures in the Eurasian Crane. Dances, See http:/ grusgrus.tofte-hjort.com/. Holds a BFA from Central St. Martin...
alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com
Alaska Sandhill Crane Blog: April 2014
http://alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com/2014_04_01_archive.html
Tuesday, April 1, 2014. The Early Life of Pi. For the Early Life of Pi. Go to Pi's homepage. A pair of sandhill cranes, who we know as Millie and Roy, has nested on our property for over a decade. Christy Yuncker Happ has watched, kept a written journal, and photographed Millie, Roy, and their colts through every day of 10 nesting seasons. They hatched 11 colts and fledged 7. In 2013, Millie and Roy returned from migration to a snowy pond on May 8. They began incubation on May 18. Pi hatched on June 16.
alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com
Alaska Sandhill Crane Blog: Twin colts hatched in 2010
http://alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com/2010/06/twin-colts-hatched-in-2010.html
Sunday, June 20, 2010. Twin colts hatched in 2010. Roy and Millie returned to their Goldstream Valley cranberry bog and its snow-covered frozen pond on April 22 - Earth Day. The pair soon began exploratory nest building (left) and then started serious incubation as the snow fell lightly on May 4 (photo right). We have seen cranes on this pond for 15 years. 2010 is the 10. Better quality images covering the first two weeks of Lucky and Chance can be found at Christy Yuncker Photo Journal. 2006 - Two colts...
alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com
Alaska Sandhill Crane Blog: July 2009
http://alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com/2009_07_01_archive.html
Friday, July 10, 2009. Death, visitations, and dance of "solidarity". For July 2 photos on Christy Yuncker Photo Journal. On July 2, 2009, we were aroused at 7 AM by unison calling of Roy and Millie. . Twin colts, Jacques and Phyl, had trailed their parents around our cranberry bog for almost three weeks since hatch on June 10. Posted by Christy Yuncker and George Happ. Links to this post. Subscribe to: Posts (Atom). Search this blog and companion websites. Crane biology on the web. In How birds think.
alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com
Alaska Sandhill Crane Blog: Millie and Roy, back again in 2014
http://alaskasandhillcraneblog.blogspot.com/2014/05/millie-and-roy-back-again-in-2014.html
Sunday, May 25, 2014. Millie and Roy, back again in 2014. To see a vortex of migrating cranes in western Nebraska, go to. From Christy Yuncker Happ. Millie and Roy returned on May 4th and began incubation on May 12th, but the eggs did not hatch. They foraged and danced often during the summer (see video below) and then departed on migration on August 29th. Posted by Christy Yuncker and George Happ. August 27, 2014 at 1:15 AM. Nice post. keep bloging . Perumahan di Tanah Baru Depok. In How birds think.