Recommended publications
  • List of the Birds of Peru Lista De Las Aves Del Perú
    LIST OF THE BIRDS OF PERU LISTA DE LAS AVES DEL PERÚ By/por MANUEL A.
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  • Budget Birds, Wildlife & Andean Landscapes
    Chile Budget Birds, Wildlife & Andean landscapes 1st March to 12th March 2021 (12 days) Diademed Sandpiper-Plover by Dubi Shapiro Chile occupies a 2,650 mile-long narrow ribbon of land between the Pacific Ocean and the Andes, and stretches from north of the Atacama Desert to Cape Horn, the southernmost headland of the Tierra del Fuego archipelago. Chile is one of South America’s most stable and prosperous nations and our tour covers some of the highlights of this fabulous country as we search for its numerous specialities and endemics. These range from the giant Andean Condor to the tiny Chilean Woodstar, and include the RBL - Chile Budget Itinerary 2 unique Chilean tapaculos called huet-huets and turcas. One of our primary targets will no doubt be the highly prized Diademed Sandpiper-Plover, while other no less desirable species include Puna Ibis, Chilean Tinamou, Peruvian Martin, Tamarugo Conebill, Chilean Woodstar, Rufous•bellied Seedsnipe, Andean Avocet, Rufous-legged Owl, appropriately named Giant Hummingbird, Puna Tinamou and thousands of flamingos of three species. We will also undertake an exciting pelagic excursion in search of the region’s seabirds, including the rare Peruvian Diving Petrel and Chilean Skua, while mammal possibilities include herds of stately Vicunas, the range-restricted Marine Otter and the bizarre Southern Mountain Viscachas. Accommodations, meals and wines are good throughout the tour and the Chilean people offer warm hospitality. Combined with the outstanding scenery of high altitude Puna lakes and snow-capped
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  • Northern Argentina Tour Report 2016
    The enigmatic Diademed Sandpiper-Plover in a remote valley was the bird of the trip (Mark Pearman) NORTHERN ARGENTINA 21 OCTOBER – 12 NOVEMBER 2016 TOUR REPORT LEADER: MARK PEARMAN Northern Argentina 2016 was another hugely successful chapter in a long line of Birdquest tours to this region with some 524 species seen although, importantly, more speciality diamond birds were seen than on all previous tours. Highlights in the north-west included Huayco Tinamou, Puna Tinamou, Diademed Sandpiper-Plover, Black-and-chestnut Eagle, Red-faced Guan, Black-legged Seriema, Wedge-tailed Hilstar, Slender-tailed Woodstar, Black-banded Owl, Lyre-tailed Nightjar, Black-bodied Woodpecker, White-throated Antpitta, Zimmer’s Tapaculo, Scribble-tailed Canastero, Rufous-throated Dipper, Red-backed Sierra Finch, Tucuman Mountain Finch, Short-tailed Finch, Rufous-bellied Mountain Tanager and a clean sweep on all the available endemcs. The north-east produced such highly sought-after species as Black-fronted Piping- Guan, Long-trained Nightjar, Vinaceous-breasted Amazon, Spotted Bamboowren, Canebrake Groundcreeper, Black-and-white Monjita, Strange-tailed Tyrant, Ochre-breasted Pipit, Chestnut, Rufous-rumped, Marsh and Ibera Seedeaters and Yellow Cardinal. We also saw twenty-fve species of mammal, among which Greater 1 BirdQuest Tour Report: Northern Argentina 2016 www.birdquest-tours.com Naked-tailed Armadillo stole the top slot. As usual, our itinerary covered a journey of 6000 km during which we familiarised ourselves with each of the highly varied ecosystems from Yungas cloud forest, monte and badland cactus deserts, high puna and altiplano, dry and humid chaco, the Iberá marsh sytem (Argentina’s secret pantanal) and fnally a week of rainforest birding in Misiones culminating at the mind-blowing Iguazú falls.
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  • Adobe PDF, Job 6
    Noms français des oiseaux du Monde par la Commission internationale des noms français des oiseaux (CINFO) composée de Pierre DEVILLERS, Henri OUELLET, Édouard BENITO-ESPINAL, Roseline BEUDELS, Roger CRUON, Normand DAVID, Christian ÉRARD, Michel GOSSELIN, Gilles SEUTIN Éd. MultiMondes Inc., Sainte-Foy, Québec & Éd. Chabaud, Bayonne, France, 1993, 1re éd. ISBN 2-87749035-1 & avec le concours de Stéphane POPINET pour les noms anglais, d'après Distribution and Taxonomy of Birds of the World par C. G. SIBLEY & B. L. MONROE Yale University Press, New Haven and London, 1990 ISBN 2-87749035-1 Source : http://perso.club-internet.fr/alfosse/cinfo.htm Nouvelle adresse : http://listoiseauxmonde.multimania.
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  • (Phthiraptera: Amblycera and Ischnocera) on Birds of Peru
    Arxius de Miscel·lània Zoològica, 19 (2021): 7–52 ISSN:Minaya 1698– et0476 al. Checklist of chewing lice (Phthiraptera: Amblycera and Ischnocera) on birds of Peru D. Minaya, F. Príncipe, J. Iannacone Minaya, D., Príncipe, F., Iannacone, J., 2021. Checklist of chewing lice (Phthiraptera: Am- blycera and Ischnocera) on the birds of Peru. Arxius de Miscel·lània Zoològica, 19: 7–52, Doi: https://doi.org/10.32800/amz.2021.19.0007 Abstract Checklist of chewing lice (Phthiraptera: Amblycera and Ischnocera) on birds of Peru. Peru is one of the countries with the highest diversity of birds worldwide, having about 1,876 species in its territory. However, studies focused on chewing lice (Phthiraptera) have been carried out on only a minority of bird species. The available data are distributed in 87 publications in the national and international literature. In this checklist we summarize all the records to date of chewing lice on wild and domestic birds in Peru. Among the 301 species of birds studied, 266 species of chewing lice were recorded. The localities with the highest records were the Departments of Cusco, Junín, Lima and Madre de Dios. No records of birds pa- rasitized by these lice have been found in seven departments of Peru. Studies related to lice have only been reported in 16 % of bird species in the country, indicating that research concerning chewing lice has not yet been performed for the the majority of birds in Peru. Data published through GBIF (Doi: 10.15470/u1jtiu) Key words: Avifauna, Ectoparasites, Lice, Parasitology, Phthiraptera Resumen Lista de verificación de piojos masticadores (Phthiraptera: Amblycera e Ischnocera) de las aves de Perú.
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  • Game Birds of the World Species List
    Game Birds of North America GROUP COMMON NAME SCIENTIFIC NAME QUAIL Northern bobwhite quail Colinus virginianus Scaled quail Callipepla squamata Gambel’s quail Callipepla gambelii Montezuma (Mearns’) quail Cyrtonyx montezumae Valley quail (California quail) Callipepla californicus Mountain quail Oreortyx pictus Black-throated bobwhite quail Colinus nigrogularis GROUSE Ruffed grouse Bonasa umbellus Spruce grouse Falcipennis canadensis Blue grouse Dendragapus obscurus (Greater) sage grouse Centrocercus urophasianus Sharp-tailed grouse Tympanuchus phasianellus Sooty grouse Dendragapus fuliginosus Gunnison sage-grouse Centrocercus minimus PARTRIDGE Chukar Alectoris chukar Hungarian partridge Perdix perdix PTARMIGAN Willow ptarmigan Lagopus lagopus Rock ptarmigan Lagopus mutus White-tailed ptarmigan Logopus leucurus WOODCOCK American woodcock Scolopax minor SNIPE Common snipe Gallinago gallinago PHEASANT Pheasant Phasianus colchicus DOVE Mourning dove Zenaida macroura White-winged dove Zenaida asiatica Inca dove Columbina inca Common ground gove Columbina passerina White-tipped dove GROUP COMMON NAME SCIENTIFIC NAME DIVING DUCK Ruddy duck Oxyuia jamaiceusis Tufted duck Aythya fuliqule Canvas back Aythya valisineoia Greater scaup Aythya marila Surf scoter Melanitta persicillata Harlequin duck Histrionicus histrionicus White-winged scoter Melanitta fusca King eider Somateria spectabillis Common eider Somateria mollissima Barrow’s goldeneye Buchephala islandica Black scoter Melanitta nigra amerieana Redhead Aythya americana Ring-necked duck aythya
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  • BIRDS of BOLIVIA UPDATED SPECIES LIST (Version 03 June 2020) Compiled By: Sebastian K
    BIRDS OF BOLIVIA UPDATED SPECIES LIST (Version 03 June 2020) https://birdsofbolivia.org/ Compiled by: Sebastian K. Herzog, Scientific Director, Asociación Armonía ([email protected]) Status codes: R = residents known/expected to breed in Bolivia (includes partial migrants); (e) = endemic; NB = migrants not known or expected to breed in Bolivia; V = vagrants; H = hypothetical (observations not supported by tangible evidence); EX = extinct/extirpated; IN = introduced SACC = South American Classification Committee (http://www.museum.lsu.edu/~Remsen/SACCBaseline.htm) Background shading = Scientific and English names that have changed since Birds of Bolivia (2016, 2019) publication and thus differ from names used in the field guide BoB Synonyms, alternative common names, taxonomic ORDER / FAMILY # Status Scientific name SACC English name SACC plate # comments, and other notes RHEIFORMES RHEIDAE 1 R 5 Rhea americana Greater Rhea 2 R 5 Rhea pennata Lesser Rhea Rhea tarapacensis , Puna Rhea (BirdLife International) TINAMIFORMES TINAMIDAE 3 R 1 Nothocercus nigrocapillus Hooded Tinamou 4 R 1 Tinamus tao Gray Tinamou 5 H, R 1 Tinamus osgoodi Black Tinamou 6 R 1 Tinamus major Great Tinamou 7 R 1 Tinamus guttatus White-throated Tinamou 8 R 1 Crypturellus cinereus Cinereous Tinamou 9 R 2 Crypturellus soui Little Tinamou 10 R 2 Crypturellus obsoletus Brown Tinamou 11 R 1 Crypturellus undulatus Undulated Tinamou 12 R 2 Crypturellus strigulosus Brazilian Tinamou 13 R 1 Crypturellus atrocapillus Black-capped Tinamou 14 R 2 Crypturellus variegatus
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  • Birds of Peru
    Birds of Peru # English Scientific name (genus & species) Español 1 Lesser Rhea Rhea pennata Suri 2 Gray Tinamou Tinamus tao Perdiz Gris 3 Black Tinamou Tinamus osgoodi Perdiz Negra 4 Great Tinamou Tinamus major Perdiz Grande 5 White-throated Tinamou Tinamus guttatus Perdiz Gargantiblance 6 Highland Tinamou Nothocercus bonapartei Perdiz de Monte 7 Tawny-breasted Tinamou Nothocercus julius Perdiz Pechileonado 8 Hooded Tinamou Nothocercus nigrocapillus Perdiz Cabecinegro 9 Cinereous Tinamou Crypturellus cinereus Perdiz Cinérea 10 Little Tinamou Crypturellus soui Perdiz Chica 11 Brown Tinamou Crypturellus obsoletus Perdiz Parda 12 Undulated Tinamou Crypturellus undulatus Perdiz Ondulada 13 Pale-browed Tinamou Crypturellus transfasciatus Perdiz Cejipálida 14 Brazilian Tinamou Crypturellus strigulosus Perdiz Brasilera 15 Black-capped Tinamou Crypturellus atrocapillus Perdiz Gorrinegro 16 Variegated Tinamou Crypturellus variegatus Perdiz Abigarrada 17 Bartlett’s Tinamou Crypturellus bartletti Perdiz de Bartlett 18 Small-billed Tinamou Crypturellus parvirostris Perdiz Piquicorto 19 Tataupa Tinamou Crypturellus tataupa Perdiz Tataupá 20 Red-winged Tinamou Rhynchotus rufescens Perdiz Alirrojo 21 Taczanowski’s Tinamou Nothoprocta taczanowskii Perdiz de Taczanowski 22 Kalinowski’s Tinamou Nothoprocta kalinowskii Perdiz de Kalinowski 23 Ornate Tinamou Nothoprocta ornata Perdiz Cordillerana 24 Andean Tinamou Nothoprocta pentlandii Perdiz Andina 25 Curve-billed Tinamou Nothoprocta curvirostris Perdiz Piquicurvo 26 Darwin’s Nothura Nothura darwinii Perdiz
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  • Argentina & Chili
    ARGENTINA & CHILI 18 February – 30 March 2007 Raoul Beunen & Marije Louwsma www.avg-w.com Argentina The Northwest, San Pedro de Atacama in Chili & Esteros del Iberá In February and March 2007 we made a trip through north Argentina. We visited the sierras near Córdoba, Mendoza, the north-western part of Argentina, the adjacent Atacama Desert in Chilli, and Esteros del Iberá in the north-eastern part of Argentina. In Salta we hired a car for 12 days. All other travel was done by public transport. Travelling around in Argentina is very easy since there are many long-distance (overnight) busses between the different cities. Getting to national parks and other good places for bird watching might require some extra effort. Visiting San Pedro de Atacama is very easy since there are several busses a week from Salta to San Pedro. The bus ride across the high Andes (the highest pass is about 5200 m.) is really beautiful. Around San Pedro it is fairly easy to add some good species, like Giant & Horned Coot and Red-backed Sierra-finch to your list. The altiplano around San Pedro de Atacama, with the desert, Salinas, Valle de Luna, the high altitude lakes, and the world famous Tatio Geysers are definitely worth a visit. The weather February and March are not the best months to visit north-western Argentina. It is the end of the rainy season and usually very hot. We were lucky and had only little rain on the first day in Calilegua and mist at Cumbres del Obispo. In the lower parts the temperature was often high and bird activity was really low after 9 o’clock.
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  • North West Argentina Jujuy Birding Route 6 Days/ 5 Nights Tour, August 12Th to 17Th (+ Optional Tour Complement, August 18Th to 23Rd )
    Rufous-throated Dipper - © Jorge La Grotteria Post “Ornithological Congress of the Americas 2017” Tour North West Argentina Jujuy birding route 6 days/ 5 nights tour, August 12th to 17th (+ optional tour complement, August 18th to 23rd ) WWW.BIRDINGBUENOSAIRES.COM Austral Yungas forest in Jujuy - © Marcelo Gavensky INTRODUCTION North-west Argentina is famous for its diversity of landscapes, wildlife and cultures. In a relatively small area it is possible to travel from the subtropical warm plains of the eastern lowlands to the high altitude cold Andean peaks, with a wide array of habitats and landscapes in between. This produces a very high bird diversity that goes from toucans and trogons to flamingoes and condors, just to mention a few iconic species. This trip comprises all major habitats of north-west Argentina, in a fairly new birding route that has been designed by us to take the best advantage of a relatively short period of time. The tour is divided in two stages: ● STAGE ONE: The Chaco lowlands and Austral Yungas forest (August 12th to 17th) Main targets: Andean Condor, King Vulture, Torrent Duck, White-rumped Hawk, Black-and-chestnut Eagle, Orange-breasted Falcon, Red-faced Guan, Black-legged Seriema, Red-legged Seriema, Golden- collared Macaw, Tucuman Parrot, Yungas Pygmy-Owl, Lyre-tailed Nightjar, Red-tailed Comet, Chaco Puffbird, Cream-backed Woodpecker, Crested Hornero, Spot-breasted Thornbird, Giant Antshrike, Stripe- backed Antbird, White-throated Antpitta, Olive-crowned Crescentchest, White-browed Tapaculo, Yungas Manakin, Rufous-throated Dipper, Many-colored Chaco-Finch, Rusty-browed Warbling-Finch, Yellow- striped Brush-Finch, Fulvous-headed Brush-Finch, Black-backed Grosbeak and more.
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  • Northwest Argentina: Yungas, Chaco and High Andes Birding Tour
    NORTHWEST ARGENTINA: YUNGAS, CHACO AND HIGH ANDES BIRDING TOUR 20 SEPTEMBER - 06 OCTOBER 2021 Rufous-throated Dipper is one of the most-wanted targets of the trip. www.birdingecotours.com [email protected] 2 | ITINERARY Northwest Argentina Argentina is the second-largest country in South America and this birding trip offers the opportunity to travel across the northwestern section of this vast and picturesque land. We will go from lowland wetlands of Buenos Aires, through the dry Chaco shrublands and into the lush Yungas cloudforest, before we climb in elevation through the dry Andean valleys and puna mountains to the high Andes in the Altiplano where we seemingly reach the roof of Argentina at 13,000 feet (3,900 meters). Our northwest Argentina trip can be considered one of the best birding trips in southern South America as it provides a unique set of birds found only in this part of the world which can be enjoyed by the most serious birder to those only setting foot on the continent for the first time. During this spectacular 17-day birding trip you may feast your eyes on some of the region’s most-wanted species such as Rufous-throated Dipper, Horned Coot, Diademed Sandpiper- Plover, Sandy Gallito, Red-faced Guan, Tucuman Mountain Finch, Moreno’s Ground Dove, Red-tailed Comet, Wedge-tailed Hillstar, the attractive Burrowing Parrot, White- throated Antpitta, Tucumán Amazon, Lyre-tailed Nightjar, Giant Antshrike, Black- legged Seriema and Black-bodied Woodpecker. Other more widespread yet classic neotropical species will include Andean Condor, Andean Goose, Torrent Duck and Southern Screamer, highly prized for those visiting South America for the first time.
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  • Birding Tour Argentina: Northwest from the Foothills to Puna
    BIRDING TOUR ARGENTINA: NORTHWEST FROM THE FOOTHILLS TO PUNA 20 SEPTEMBER - 06 OCTOBER 2021 Diademed Sandpiper-Plover will be targeted in the high puna. www.birdingecotours.com [email protected] 2 | ITINERARY Northwest Argentina Where else can you go from arid scrub with huge cacti to Yungas cloudforest at 7000 feet (2134 meters) to puna at 10000 feet (3048 meters), and to alto andino (high Andean) habitat at 13000 feet (3962 meters) within the space of days? You’ll see cloudforest wonders like the highly range-restricted Rufous-throated Dipper and Red-faced Guan. Four species of attractive Metriopelia ground doves, one of them endemic, can be seen in the arid pre-puna of the Humahuaca Valley. Spectacular rock formations greet you along the way into the Andes. You’ll find high-altitude alkaline lakes filled with three different flamingo species, including one of the world’s rarest, James’s Flamingo. Isolated pockets of finches, hummingbirds, and furnarids of all shapes and sizes abound. Marshes full of rails, herons, jacanas, limpkins, screamers, seriemas, and ibis plus the many splendors of Calilegua National Park fill you with wonder. One of the most charismatic targets on this trip are Torrent Duck and Andean Condor, and other classic Andean species are rather easy to find here. While in the high Yungas we will also be searching for Diademed Sandpiper-Plover! Both Black-legged and Red-legged Seriemas are usually found without too many problems, along with a host of other amazing Chaco birds that with some luck will include Quebracho Crested Tinamou, Chaco Owl, the sought-after Spot-winged Falconet, and so many others.
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