Sandpiper

Results: 380



#Item
221Sandpipers / Birds of Western Australia / Calidris / Erolia / Scolopacidae / Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network / Upland Sandpiper / Buff-breasted Sandpiper / Piping Plover / Charadriiformes / Ornithology / Neognathae

United States Shorebird Conservation Plan[removed]Part 5: Regional Shorebird Conservation Goals and Strategies Overview The eleven regional working groups formed in this planning process are the core of the U.S. Shorebird

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.shorebirdplan.org

Language: English - Date: 2013-01-16 00:15:15
222Ornithology / Calidris / Aquatic ecology / Wetland / Buff-breasted Sandpiper / Wader / White-rumped Sandpiper / Birds Korea / Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network / Birds of Western Australia / Erolia / Sandpipers

The Auk 130(1):88−97, 2013  The American Ornithologists’ Union, 2013. Printed in USA. Broad-scale Relationships between shorebirds and landscapes in the Southern Great Plains

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.greatplainslcc.org

Language: English - Date: 2014-02-13 17:33:18
223Sandpipers / Birds of Western Australia / Calidris / Erolia / Scolopacidae / Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network / Western Sandpiper / Bird migration / Red Knot / Charadriiformes / Ornithology / Neognathae

Western Sandpiper (Calidris mauri) is a small shorebird Photo: © Tim Bowman/USFWS

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.whsrn.org

Language: English - Date: 2011-11-10 22:26:56
224

Back Bay National Wildlife Refuge 4005 Sandpiper Road Virginia Beach, VA[removed][removed]http://www.fws.gov/backbay/ Federal Relay Service

Add to Reading List

Source URL: www.fws.gov

- Date: 2010-03-25 09:25:01
    225Calidris / Erolia / Sandpipers / Birds of Western Australia / Shorebirds / Zackenberg / Purple Sandpiper / Ruddy Turnstone / Sanderling / Charadriiformes / Ornithology / Neognathae

    BIRD POPULATIONS A journal of global avian biogeography Volume[removed]2008)

    Add to Reading List

    Source URL: birdpop.net

    Language: English - Date: 2009-12-31 23:02:14
    226Zoology / Wader / Semipalmated Sandpiper / Bird / Red Knot / Cape May National Wildlife Refuge / Grays Harbor National Wildlife Refuge / Calidris / Sandpipers / Ornithology

    Issue Profile: Docks and Piers in Shorebird Feeding and Roosting Areas Photo Credit: Lindsay Tudor Maine Department of Inland Fisheries and Wildlife

    Add to Reading List

    Source URL: www.maine.gov

    Language: English - Date: 2014-01-30 13:29:17
    227Erolia / Calidris / Birds of Western Australia / Western Hemisphere Shorebird Reserve Network / Upland Sandpiper / American Woodcock / Wader / Piping Plover / Buff-breasted Sandpiper / Charadriiformes / Neognathae / Sandpipers

    United States Shorebird Conservation Plan[removed]Part 1: The Wind Birds Introduction Shorebirds are indeed among the most remarkable creatures on earth. Each year, most species of shorebirds undertake phenomenal migration

    Add to Reading List

    Source URL: www.shorebirdplan.org

    Language: English - Date: 2013-01-16 00:16:10
    228Geography of South Africa / Charadrius / Plover / Egretta / Palm Warbler / Birds of Yellowstone National Park / Dendroica / Taxonomy / Protected areas of South Africa / Birds of North American boreal forests

    COMMON NAME Grayton Beach Bird List COMMON NAME SCIENTIFIC NAME HABITAT Spotted sandpiper Red-winged blackbird

    Add to Reading List

    Source URL: www.floridastateparks.org

    Language: English - Date: 2008-11-03 10:51:16
    229Neognathae / Calidris / Birds of Western Australia / Erolia / Shorebirds / Bird migration / Red Knot / Semipalmated Sandpiper / Piping Plover / Charadriiformes / Ornithology / Sandpipers

    Microsoft PowerPoint - 9_Approaches_to_VA_Scale_Galbraith.ppt [Compatibility Mode]

    Add to Reading List

    Source URL: nctc.fws.gov

    Language: English - Date: 2013-06-11 10:48:51
    230Tringa / Ducks / Anas / Greater Yellowlegs / Mallard / Sandpiper / Ornithology / Shorebirds / Zoology

    Chambly Canal Every bird needs habitat—food, water, cover, and a nest site—to survive and reproduce. A Wood Duck, for example, finds food in open water and its cover and nest site on the wooded shoreline. Wood Ducks

    Add to Reading List

    Source URL: www.lcbp.org

    Language: English - Date: 2013-04-11 08:34:18
    UPDATE