Remove Eggs Remove Protection Remove Research Remove Training
article thumbnail

Birding Sepilok, Borneo (Part 2)

10,000 Birds

Fortunately for the honor of the species, the researchers found that kleptoparasitism was practiced at a low rate (4% of observations) while much more often, drongos captured insects disturbed by other species (41% of observations). The associated bird species seek out drongos, apparently relying upon them heavily for protection.

Sri Lanka 199
article thumbnail

Push Land-Grant Universities Out of the Meat Industry

Animal Person

. _ Press Release Governors: Stop Ecodestructive University Training! March 2009 Contact: David Cantor, 215-886-7721 or RPA4all@aol.com Arriving at all 50 states’ governors’ offices in mid-March, a special request: Get our land-grant universities (LGUs) out of the meat industry. Many say you can’t eat meat and be an environmentalist.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Trending Sources

article thumbnail

Summer Books for Kids (and the rest of us)

10,000 Birds

They cut down the trees the parrots used for nesting and brought black rats, who ate their eggs, and honeybees who swarmed into their nests, and by 1937 there were only about 2,000 Puerto Rican Parrots left. A hawk-avoidance training program is created. Captive-bred parrots are released into the wild and eaten by hawks.

article thumbnail

Peterson Field Guide to North American Bird Nests: A Field Guide Review

10,000 Birds

This may have been partly a leftover from the Victorian fascination with egg collecting (the infamous passion known as oology), but probably more from people’s burgeoning interest in the nests and eggs found in their gardens and fields, gateway artifacts to a newer hobby called birdwatching. The Harrison guides are out of print.

Eggs 216
article thumbnail

Starlings and Eagles

10,000 Birds

To understand, and thus to protect. Sara, one of the researchers, explained that it was a newish bird. They made scrambled eggs for the bait birds each morning and fed them special premium mealworms to help them ward off the cold of the mountain and the stress of their daily grid. Thank you, brave Starling. I salute you.

Eagles 169