<--- Back to Details
First PageDocument Content
Common House Martin / Delichon / Fynbos / Sub-Saharan Africa / Ornithology / Africa / Eurasia / Hirundinidae / Swallow / Hirundo
Date: 2011-10-04 06:31:22
Common House Martin
Delichon
Fynbos
Sub-Saharan Africa
Ornithology
Africa
Eurasia
Hirundinidae
Swallow
Hirundo

72 Hirundinidae: swallows and martins

Add to Reading List

Source URL: sabap2.adu.org.za

Download Document from Source Website

File Size: 193,61 KB

Share Document on Facebook

Similar Documents

Architecture / Environment / Nyctalus / Apus / Common Noctule / Common Swift / Green infrastructure / Common House Martin / Green roof / Vesper bats / Environmental design / Environmental engineering

Green Infrastructure in our neighbourhood Sharing our houses with birds and bats Dr. Lubomira Vavrova ([removed]) BROZ (Slovakia) CEEweb Academy 2014

DocID: L9L4 - View Document

Hirundo / Ornithology / Swallow / Ode to a Nightingale / Sand Martin / John Keats / Bird / The Birds / Common House Martin / Passerida / Sylvioidea / Hirundinidae

COPYRIGHT NOTICE: Jeremy Mynott: Birdscapes is published by Princeton University Press and copyrighted, © 2009, by Princeton University Press. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form by a

DocID: npQA - View Document

Ornithology / Progne / Purple Martin / Swallow / Cucurbitaceae / Martins / Bird nest / Common House Martin / Nest box / Zoology / Biology / Latin American culture

PDF Document

DocID: fWSZ - View Document

Petrochelidon / Hirundo / Swallow / Nest / Bird nest / Common House Martin / Delichon / Passerida / Sylvioidea / Hirundinidae

Barn Swallows and Cliff Swallows Swallows are migratory songbirds that occur and breed in Washington from spring to fall. They are sparrow-sized birds with long, pointed wings and streamlined bodies developed for fast, a

DocID: 8Bcu - View Document

Bird / Common House Martin / Bird migration / Crag martin / Ornithology / Zoology / Swallow

ONGAR WILDLIFE SOCIETY WINTER HOME OF THE SUMMER MIGRANTS by Peter Lack At a recent OWLS meeting, Peter Lack talked about something which has fascinated bird watchers for years - why do so many species of birds fly off t

DocID: 7rIv - View Document