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         Birds By Location:     more detail
  1. Location checklist to the birds of the Chiricahua Mountains / by Richard Cachor Taylor ; drawings by Lois McLane, Tim Manolis & Margaret Pope by Richard Cachor Taylor, 1993
  2. Washington Birds Their Location and Identification by Earl J. And Klaus G. Sonnenberg Larrison, 1968
  3. The Multi-Site Church Revolution: Being One Church in Many Locations by Greg Ligon, Geoff Surratt, et all 2009-08-23
  4. Twenty-five Years of the Weather Bird Press. At various locations but under one master: V. Gerry. With a critical introduction by Bunston Quayles (pseud.). by Vance Gerry, 1993

1. Identifying Wild Birds By Location At WildBirds.com
Use bird checklists and location as a guide to identifying birds. Find morehelp here at WildBirds.com. Identification by Location.
http://www.wildbirds.com/identify_location.htm
Identification by Location wildbirds.com Identify Checklists of the Birds
of each State and Province
... Checklists of the Birds of U.S. Military Bases (!!)
Someone went to a lot of work and did a great job! It is easier to identify an unknown bird if you can narrow your choices. Any of the 10,000 species of birds of the world may be in your back yard right now! It is highly unlikely that one of them is an Emperor Penguin or an Emu. It is more likely that the bird is one that has already been seen in your area. You can start with a list of the birds of your state or province. The links to the right can show you all the birds that have been seen. Remember, these state/province checklists include some very rare birds that have been seen only once or twice in your area. But you have still managed to limit your choices to 400-600 species at most. You can narrow your choices even further. Find a local checklist of birds in your area. Audubon Chapters or State Parks will often have checklists showing local seasonal abundance. These checklists may include 200-300 species. You started your search by considering all the birds of the world and already you narrowed your choices down to just 2-3% of the birds of the world!

2. Birds Of San Diego
Birding trips to San Diego's Tijuana Estuary in Imperial Beach See the variety of birds by location and time, i.e.
http://www.flexitours.com/birds.htm
BIRD WATCHING
IN SAN DIEGO
*this webpage is being built, please check back! Bird watchers! Plan your trip to San Diego for bird watching with 'Run of the World' and receive more than just air and lodging! Get information and maps on the best sites to view the most birds, what birds will most likely be seen at what locations and at what times, and DISCOUNTED ENTRY to the San Diego Zoo and their bird collection! Transport for viewing is also available upon request.
The San Diego Bird Festival Web Site is now up. Go to
http://www.sandiegonaturefestivals.org/
Nature Festivals of San Diego County BIRDS OF THE IMPERIAL BEACH ESTUARY San Diego, and the Imperial Beach Estuary have some of the best viewings of Egrets, Seagulls, Hawks, Falcons, Owls, Pelicans, Terns, Herons...MANY MORE! the Tijuana River Estuary in Imperial Beach there are many species of birds found here... ...from Egrets to harriers to ducks... a pair of Egrets take flight!
See the variety of birds by location and time, i.e.-

3. Bird Links To The World
Comprehensive collection of links related to birds, birding, and birders, divided by geographic location.
http://www.bsc-eoc.org/links/

4. Ring-necked Duck - Richard Ditch
birds in Nature images of wild birds by Richard Ditch. Subject setting.This is the same location where this Lesser Scaup was photographed.
http://home.earthlink.net/~richditch/rnduck14.htm
Birds in Nature - images of wild birds by Richard Ditch
Subject: Ring-necked Duck (Aythya collaris)
Place: Tempe, AZ, USA
Date: November 2002
Film: Fuji Sensia 100
Exposure: Aperture priority matrix metered
Scan: Minolta Dimage, 80% of frame
Commentary: This is probably a different female than this Ring-necked Duck, although they were taken in the same park setting. This is the same location where this Lesser Scaup was photographed.
Back to the Birds alphabetic list
Back to the Birds checklist order Back to the Birds by location Back to Birds in Nature Home Page

5. BurnerKitty.com - Free Websites For Pets!
Page 1 of 7 Next 5 birds Browse birds by Name/Date/location Browseby Name 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
http://www.burnerkitty.com/friends/birds/
Pet Name Pet Location Type/Breed HOME
We're CLOSED![?]
AnimalVote.com BROWSE PETS ...
Our Buddy List

COMMUNITY
Get a Page

Update Your Page

FREE E-Mail!

Main Guestbook
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Retrieve Postcard

MISC
Picture Scanning
Email Us Link to Us Awards ... Web Design Enjoy Browsing the Birds! Name: Location: Plymouth Minnesota Hobbies: Suki Loves To Talk!! Yellow Bird Loves To Chirrrrp!! Pictures: [more] Website Info Guestbook ... More Pix Name: Bongo Location: West Yorkshire UK Hobbies: Demolition Pictures: Bio: Bongo is a lovely bird with a great pers... [more] Website Info Guestbook ... More Pix Name: Kaspar Location: Winfield, British Columbia Hobbies: Following His Brother Around The House, Poking Everybody With My Sharp Little Baby Nails And Biting Toes. Pictures: Bio: I'm still just a baby and finally am get... [more] Website Info Guestbook ... More Pix Name: Jalapeno Hobbies: Chewing On Zippers Pictures: Bio: This pesty little ring neck parakeet, is... [more] Website Info Guestbook ... Bio Name: Bambino Location: Winfield, British Columbia Hobbies: Biting, Chewing, Shredding, Drawing Blood, Making Grown Men Cry, Instilling Fear In All Who Dare Try To Love Her Pictures: Bio: Bambino is an exceptionally beautiful lo...

6. Research On Airport Location Is Not For The Birds
Next Section Previous Section Table of Contents Research on airportlocation is not for the birds. by Tim Lougheed. When formerly
http://www.carleton.ca/duc/tic/twac/96/ja18/s13.html

7. Birding By Location
Return to the Utah birds Home Page International Birding Books. Books Music Asia.A Field Guide to the birds of Japan by Shinji Takano (Photographer).
http://www.utahbirds.org/books/international.html

International Birding Books
Books Music Enter keywords...
Africa
  • Illustrated Guide to the Birds of Southern Africa
    ISBN: 0691044694 (hardcover, 426 p.) [about $58]
    Utah County Birder Natalie Tanner ( natalie@utahbirds.org ) took this book with her on her September 1998 trip to southern Africa. Natalie writes: "I had a great field guide along, Birds of Southern Africa , by Sinclair, Hockey & Tarboton, which I was constantly putting to good use."
Asia

8. Birding By Location
Return to the Utah birds Home Page Regional Birding Books. Books Music Enterkeywords (See A Field Guide to birds of the Desert Southwest). Colorado.
http://www.utahbirds.org/books/geographic.html

Regional Birding Books
Books Music Enter keywords...
National Parks
Books of the Utah Region (See Utah for books specific to Utah)

9. GORP - The Greatest Concentration Of Species On Earth! - The Birds Of The Manu B
Article by Barry Walker about the birding at this incredibly rich destination.
http://www.gorp.com/gorp/location/latamer/peru/manubio.htm
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Antarctica ... Discussion Boards The Birds Of The Manu Biosphere Reserve The Greatest Concentration of Species on Earth! By Ornithologist Guide Barry Walker of Adventure Specialists Peru's Manu Biosphere Reserve has the highest concentration of bird life on Earth. At the time of writing approximately, 925 species have been recorded. Ornitholigists expect this figure to break the 1000 mark in the near future as remoter areas of the reserve are explored. There are a little under 9000 species of birds in the world, meaning Manu holds one in every nine species found on the planet. No other protected area on Earth contains so many birds. The Biosphere Reserve encompasses a great variety of altitudinal zones and habitat types. Altitudes vary from over 4000 meters above sea level in the high Andes down to 350 meters in the lowland Amazonian rain forest. For every 1000 meters gained or lost, the structure of the bird communities differs. This altitudinal variation, coupled with the variety of forest types, grasslands, lakes, and micro-habitats such as bamboo stands, reed-beds, and treefalls, has produced the highest bird count for any area in the world.

10. Body Mind Yoga -- Warmed By Solar
Denver, the Body Mind Awareness Yoga Center is in an ideal location to practice pines,and as a result, the Center is visited by numerous wildlife and birds.
http://www.bodymindyoga.com/location.html
Home Classes Workshops About BMA ... Yoga Cards Body Mind Awareness
Yoga Center
Warmed by Solar Energy in
Evergreen, Colorado
Located in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains near Denver, the Body Mind Awareness Yoga Center is in an ideal location to practice yoga. The Center sits in a meadow near the foot of Evergreen Mountain within 25 miles of two wilderness areas. The area is heavily forested with Ponderosa and lodgepole pines, and as a result, the Center is visited by numerous wildlife and birds. For address and specific directions, please call 303-674-6047 and request our brochure. The Center was designed to fit into this environment in a friendly, low-impact manner. The studio was designed to take advantage of energy-efficient lighting to reduce electricity bills and solar design to reduce heating bills. A number of recycled materials, such as lumber and decking, were used in construction. The Center obtains its electricity from renewable wind energy via Wind Source and advocates Green Power The result is a warm, cozy environment where you can leave your cares at the door, focus on how you feel at that moment, and gain awareness through yoga.

11. Surfbirder - THE Search Engine For Birds And Birding
OR. Search current Britain Ireland Rarity Photos (by Species, location,Photographer or Date). Species Photographer. location. County.
http://www.surfbirder.com/index4.html

Index of Bird Images
Search for images in Trip Reports, older Rarity Pics, ID and Feature Articles Search (enter species or bird family name):
OR (by Species, Location, Photographer or Date) Species
Photographer
Location
County
Search current Britain and Ireland Scarce Bird Photos (by Species, Location, Photographer or Date) Species
Photographer
Location
County
Search current European Rarity Photos (by Species, Location, Photographer or Date) Species Photographer Location County Search current N. American Rarity Photos (by Species, Location, Photographer or Date) Species Photographer Location County Surfbirder only crawls and indexes birding websites. Your results will be more relevant than any other search engine out there! SurfBirder Banner Exchange Get a Surfbirder Search Box

12. Dennis Paulson
Paulson, DR 1969. Review of Washington birds, their location and identification,by EJ Larrison and KG Sonnenberg. W. Bird Bander 44 4647. Paulson, DR 1974.
http://www.ups.edu/biology/dennis/dennis.html
Dennis Paulson
BS, University of Miami, 1958
PhD, University of Miami, 1966 Director, Slater Museum of Natural History
337 Thompson Hall
phone: 253-879-3798
fax: 253-879-3352
e-mail: dpaulson@ups.edu RESEARCH My general interests focus on biodiversity and biology of dragonflies and birds. My current research is on the biology and systematics of Northwest and Neotropical dragonflies. I am particularly interested in the adaptive significance of coloration and am little by little publishing studies I have conducted on this subject. Evolution is the process by which I approach research questions, although both ecology and ethology interest me greatly. I am also organismally oriented, i.e., interested in whole organisms, and some of my research has been descriptive-observing species in nature and writing about what they were doing. My favored approach is to ask evolutionary questions of organisms-why they are as they are, what selective pressures have molded them? Asking "why" questions leads to observational, experimental, and literature research. After a long period of research on shorebirds (sandpipers, plovers and their relatives), in part because I was writing a book on them, I have chosen to return to the study of dragonflies, a strong early interest that I neglected during my "shorebird years." For my own research I am presently emphasizing biodiversity and systematics, as I feel more and more the need to deal with questions that are relevant to the health of our endangered planet, but I retain great enthusiasm for research on all aspects of the basic biology of dragonflies.

13. Bill Coo With The Birds - Warwickshire Web
Details, Watch the birds celebrate Valentine's time as they bill and cooaround the park. Time, 2.00pm 4.00pm. location, Ryton Pools Country Park.
http://www.warwickshire.gov.uk/corporate/EventDbp.nsf/By Date/F975F02F24C676FC80

14. AdventureTV.com - Videos By Geographic Location
All of Madagascar's mammals, most of its birds, and more than 80% ofits plants are endemic species! Age of Aggressor Diving 15 min.
http://www.adventuretv.com/Channel/MapNav.asp?AREA=islands

15. Herald Sun Odd Birds Of Menace [15feb03]
Odd birds of menace by JOHN HAMILTON 15feb03 THERE'S the thwack, thwack, thwack ofarmy choppers patrolling Please provide your full name and suburb/location.
http://heraldsun.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5478,5985949%5E2862,00.html

16. The Life Of Birds | Making The Series
The sequences where he speaks to camera on location and interacts with birds for example where he talks to woodpeckers in Patagonia by tapping a tree
http://www.pbs.org/lifeofbirds/making/
Making the Series
by Gareth Huw Davies The kiwi is one of the rarest
and shiest birds in the world. It only comes out to feed by nights in remote parts of New Zealand. So how did the BBC manage to film it so candidly for "The Life of Birds?" Series producer Mike Salisbury takes up the story. It proves the value of the assiduous "reccy" or reconnoitre trip, the many months spent in research before an inch of film was shot. Mr Salisbury went to New Zealand determined to find a good location in which to film the unique bird. "After a month I had still not found anywhere. The kiwi is the national symbol, but even the Department of Conservation said it would be so hard to find we might have to film tame birds. I told them wherever possible our policy was to film birds in the wild, behaving naturally." Eventually Mr Salisbury met a man in a bar in Invercargill, on the southermost tip of New Zealand, who told him kiwis could be seen on Stewart Island off the south coast. He took the ferry, booked into the hotel and asked around. He was directed to local man Philip Smith who took him out that night in his boat, around a headland to a secluded beach. "We crouched down on the sand and, just as the moon rose, out of the forest came two kiwis to feed on sand hoppers along the tide line. It was a magical moment. We wrote this scene into the script and returned the following year to film the perfect sequence with Sir David Attenborough." [It features in the last part of the first program.] They used the Starlight camera (so sensitive that, as the name suggests, it only needs starlight to operate).

17. Backyard Birds: Location, Cleanliness Of Feeder Is Key 2/15/02
Released February 15, 2002 location, Cleanliness of Feeder is Key MANHATTAN, Kan. Birding is the fastest growing activity in the country, growing more than 200 percent since 1983.
http://www.oznet.ksu.edu/news/sty/2002/birds_location021502.htm
Skip the navigation header body Released: February 15, 2002
Related stories:
Feeders Attract Birds for Watching

Different Feed Attracts Different Birds
Backyard Birds
Location, Cleanliness of Feeder is Key MANHATTAN, Kan. – Birding is the fastest growing activity in the country, growing more than 200 percent since 1983. One of the local activities gaining popularity involves bird feeding, said Kansas State University Research and Extension agent Chuck Otte. According to the National Survey on Recreation and the Environment, more than 33 percent of American adults enjoy at least a mild form of bird watching. Due to the popularity, hobbyists may encounter struggles with their efforts to get started with the feeding project. Some challenges will need to be dealt with, others can be ignored, said Otte, Geary County agriculture Extension agent. Sanitation - When birds spend time in a concentrated setting, the potential for transmitting diseases greatly increases. Otte recommends cleaning seasonal feeders at the start and middle of the season, while every three months for year-round feeders. "This is a critical step," Otte said. "Fortunately, with changing weather some of these problems take care of themselves, yet many times a little cleaning is necessary."

18. WildBirds.com -- Answers To Your Bird Questions!
Guide to feeding, attracting, and identifing backyard birds.Category Recreation Birding Backyard Birding...... Just enter colors, size, habitat and location. The ID Wizard willshow you photos of all the birds that match your description.
http://www.wildbirds.com/
WildBirds.com Feeding Wild Birds
Types of Feeders

Seeds to Attract Birds

Beyond Bird Seed
...
Feeding FAQ

WildBirds.com is the place to come for answers about wild birds in your yard and around the corner! New WildBirds.com Forums
Eight new forums let you talk with others about your birding questions.
Simply select a forum and click "Post".
Click here to see an instructional video

Wildbirds.com Newsletter!

Sign-up now! WildBirds.com can show you how to attract more birds to your yard. We can help you identify the birds at your feeders. We can help you if you find a sick or injured bird. Explore. Click on any one of the sections listed to the left for detailed information. Scroll down for even more WildBirds topics. The first two sections give tips on Feeding and Attracting wild birds. If you want to have more feathered visitors to your yard, this is the place to start! In the section called Protecting Wild Birds you will discover what to do with injured or baby birds you find. You can also learn why that crazy bird keeps

19. The Birds
The birds Filming location
http://www.movie-locations.com/intromovies/birds.html

20. Birds By State
birds in Nature images of wild birds by Richard Ditch. Species byLocation. This option allows viewing my bird photos by the state
http://home.earthlink.net/~richditch/locationorder.htm
Birds in Nature - images of wild birds by Richard Ditch
Species by Location
This option allows viewing my bird photos by the state in which the photo was taken. Within each state category, images are listed in checklist order. If you prefer to select images from an alphabetic list, use the alphabetic selection page. If you prefer to select images from a checklist order, use the checklist selection page. NOTE: The desire to add new and better images while keeping within the limitations of available space has caused me to delete some images previously available on this site. I know this is bad web form, but I had no other reasonable alternative. If you are a return visitor who really has a need to see one of these previously available images again, send me email describing what you are looking for and I'll see what can be done. AZ CA FL MA ... WA
Arizona
Common Loon 3
Yellow-billed Loon 6

Green Heron 1

Green Heron 8
...
Lesser Goldfinch 5
California
Willet 1
Heerman's Gull 1
Florida
Pied-billed Grebe
Northern Mockingbird - FL
Maine
Herring Gull
Massachusetts
Purple Martin
New Jersey
Northern Gannet
Canada Goose

Canvasback

Lesser Yellowlegs
...
Clay-colored Sparrow
New Mexico
Great Egret Snow Geese Northern Pintail Red-tailed Hawk - NM ... Western Meadowlark 3
Virginia
Great Blue Heron Black Skimmers
Washington
White-tailed Ptarmigan
Go to Birds by alphabetic name Go to Birds by Checklist order Back to Birds in Nature Home Page

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