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Canadaga (meaning "Canadian bird" [1]) is a flightless bird genus from the Late Cretaceous. The single known species is Canadaga arctica. It lived in the shallow seas around what today is Bylot and Devon Islands in Nunavut, Canada. Its fossils were found in rocks dated to the Campanian [2] to mid-Maastrichtian age, about 67 million years ago. [3]
The American Federation of Aviculture publishes the AFA Watchbird for members. The Watchbird is a three-time winner of the Printing and Imaging Association of MidAmerica (PIA) Graphics Excellence Award (graphex). The Watchbird awards were for "Best of Category" in color magazine series.
Italian Bird Protection League (Lega Italiana Protezione Uccelli, LIPU) Norway. Norwegian Ornithological Society (Norsk Ornitologisk Forening, NOF) Poland. Polish Society for the Protection of Birds (Ogólnopolskie Towarzystwo Ochrony Ptaków, OTOP) Spain. Spanish Ornithological Society (Sociedad Española de Ornitologían', SEO)
Motus wildlife tracking network is a program of Birds Canada, it was launched in 2014 in the US and Canada, by 2022 more than 1,500 receiver stations have been installed in 34 countries, most receivers are concentrated in the United States and Canada. The president of Birds Canada is Patrick Nadeau.
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The Canadian Lowline Cattle Association defines its objectives as including "maintain the purity and improve the breed" of cattle as well as collecting maintaining breed information and publishing a Herd Book. [2] The Essex Pig Society is building up the numbers of the Essex Pig, formerly thought to be an extinct breed of the domestic pig. [3]
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The craze for hairless “bully” cat kittens is leading unlicensed breeders to illegally use Instagram and Facebook to sell the animals for thousands of pounds each, an investigation has uncovered.