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The Most Popular Videos on Our YouTube Channel in 2017

10,000 Birds

If Japan Can Why Can’t We : 17,000 views (2 years – 39,000). Deming 101 – Theory of Knowledge/PDSA (This video has excerpts from Ian Bradbury’s presentation at our annual conference in 2013): 1,400 views (3 years – 4,900). excerpt from Bill Bellow’s presentation at the 2012 Deming Conference.

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Red-necked Stint with a Japanese flag

10,000 Birds

I also have a Grey-tailed Tattler that visits us and was marked with a plain white and an engraved blue flag “35″ in Taiwan in August 2012. I first observed it on 28th November 2012 and it left us and headed north to return to the exact same place to be observed on 19th November 2013.

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Saving Birds From Invasive … Plants?

10,000 Birds

Between 2012 and 2013, populations of Laysan and Black-footed Albatrosses at Midway reached near-record levels. And just a few months ago, conservationists celebrated the hatching of a Short-tailed Albatross on the atoll, only the third time this rare bird has produced a chick outside of Japan. mainland.

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A Grey-tailed Tattler flagged In Taiwan returns annually

10,000 Birds

It was only a week later that we discovered our first Terek Sandpiper that had been flagged at Torinumi in Japan. On 28th November 2012 I came across a large flock of shorebirds and was carefully looking through them for anything a little bit different and generally observing their activities after high tide.

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Birds Threatened by Asiatic Sand Sedge Invasion on Long Island

10,000 Birds

In the early 1900s this plant was introduced to the beaches of New Jersey from Japan and subsequently planted on many beaches there as an erosion control plant because its prolific rhizomes stabilized the sand. A new invasive plant is threatening the beaches of Long Island, Asiatic Sand Sedge or Carex kobomugi.