Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
It was the first documented sighting of the bird in the state, said Jamey Emmert, avian education coordinator for the Ohio Department of Natural Resources. It's very unusual to find this coastal ...
I was curious about just how unusual this sighting was. But if you check out ebird.org , an online database of bird sightings, you can find a handful reported every winter in the Seacoast area ...
Here are some uncommon birds spotted in WNY this winter. Check out this list of birds spotted by bird watchers on ebird.org's New York Rare Bird Alert. The website gathers this information in the ...
Unusual bird sightings in New York City attract enough public interest to receive media attention, sometimes granting a level of celebrity to the bird. [79] When a snowy owl was seen in Central Park in 2021, for example, large crowds converged to see it. Snowy owls are not rare in the region, but are very uncommon in Manhattan, and it was the ...
Double-crested cormorant, Nannopterum auritum — now common from spring to fall, this bird was a rare migrant around 1900; much less common in winter, but sightings are increasing; mostly found on some coastal islands, but also on major rivers and some inland lakes; by the late 1990s, there were at least 1,000 nesting pairs in the state; these ...
Several unusual animal sightings have taken place in Sandusky County, and Andrew Brown, director of the Sandusky County Park District, keeps an informal list that includes spoonbills, porcupines ...
Scaled fruiteaters have captured the interest of birdwatchers and ecotourists, attracting visitors to the Andean regions where they are found. Their unique appearance and elusive behavior make them a sought-after sighting for bird enthusiasts. Because of their elusiveness there is a lack of research and knowledge on these birds. [2]
An anhinga sighting in Brooklyn in spring 2023 made headlines in the New York Times; around the same time a flock of 22 of the birds, also known as “water turkeys” or “snake birds,” were ...