Flocks of migratory shorebirds are yet to arrive, but small coveys of rock ptarmigan are already roaming about. |
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Flocks of magpie geese and whistling ducks, startled by the outboard, take to the air shattering the early morning silence with their calls. |
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Flocks of terns and cormorants fished offshore, while fronds of kelp writhed in the surf like the flailing arms of sea monsters. |
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Flocks are common outside of the breeding season, and American Goldfinches often flock with redpolls and Pine Siskins. |
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Flocks of urbanists and media enthusiasts walked the streets carrying portable radio receivers in the hope of picking up the broadcasts. |
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Flocks of mixed finches including siskins bounced along the hedges and down to the wooded beck. |
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Flocks of penguins occasionally appear where they have dipped into the sea from ice-free pockets near the shore. |
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Flocks of birds, including large ducks, Egyptian geese and dabchicks, were coated in oil on Wednesday. |
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Flocks of wintering water birds include the thrush, the kingfisher, the robin, the shama, the barbet, the bee-eater, the flycatcher, the sunbird, the bulbul and the drongo. |
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Flocks of native water birds squawked as they flew over head and he could smell the fresh water and the rows of pine trees that circled the ridgeline. |
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Flocks of parrots chattered at sunset from tangles of mangrove. |
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Flocks were never observed crossing into neighboring woodlots. |
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Flocks of birds also begin to arrive back from the Arctic and Iceland, while others such as the swallow and house martin are leaving for the south. |
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Instead of spreading out and confronting their neighbors in hostile face-offs, foraging sanderlings bunched together in tight little flocks. |
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Small flocks of mangy goats and sheep, shepherded by women in flowing black abayas, forage in the trash. |
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Clinically normal waterfowl and sea birds may introduce the virus into flocks. |
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After the plane arrives, we fly over the watery green plain, skimming above rivers of burnished silver and snowy flocks of tundra swan. |
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The Grassquit resides in small flocks and likes to use empty bananaquit nests for roosting at night. |
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Outside of the breeding season, Greater Scaup form large flocks or rafts, numbering in the thousands. |
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They raised crops and pastured their flocks in Morocco's mountainous inland regions. |
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The program also encourages producers to select for resistance and to use scrapie-resistant rams in flocks that have risk factors for scrapie. |
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Since 15 to 25 percent of male sheep in U.S. flocks don't mate, ranchers want to find a way to identify good breeding rams. |
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While hens usually travel together, toms roam either in separate flocks or alone. |
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I love the wonderful flat landscape with its wide skies where so many flocks of birds fly freely. |
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Looking after the health and welfare of their flocks should be a normal part of all poultry keepers' practices. |
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In spring especially they come alive with collared fly catchers, woodchat shrikes and huge flocks of all kinds of warblers. |
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Alpine farmers checking their flocks, woodsmen, hunters, postmen and border guards used skis as pure tools for transport. |
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For anyone with a vision of flocks of sheep being replaced by flocks of tourists, I have a word to the wise. |
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The two flocks each numbered 200 head, of which about 100 females are normally lactating. |
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His hand movements alternated between fluttery flocks of birds and rigid Godzilla claws. |
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He observed that sanderlings, when not foraging, roosted amicably in large flocks on sandbars. |
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In the wild, the zebra finch is a communal bird, living in flocks of up to 100 members. |
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Dusky antbirds neither join in mixed species flocks nor regularly pursue prey displaced by army ants. |
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With the continuous increase in the size of herds and flocks pastoralists moved away from the settled areas around Adelaide. |
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A sudden wind swept up the tail of my coat, and flocks of bugs hung low in the air, predicting rain. |
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Vast flocks of Canada geese, sandhill cranes, snow geese, and shorebirds make this look like a nature movie. |
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Near sunset, flocks of white and black egrets flew in to settle in the tangled mangrove branches above. |
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Just before sunset, flocks of the red birds gather to roost in the mangrove trees transforming green bush to a glowing red. |
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Lone Little Gulls are often found amidst flocks of Bonaparte's Gulls and terns. |
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Warm-blooded animals are the only terrestrial creatures that live in large herds or flocks or that migrate long distances. |
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We'd be out in the fields trying to flush pheasants, and flocks of migrating blackbirds would appear. |
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No flocks consisting of more than three mated pairs were observed in the study area over the course of the two-year study period. |
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Black Oystercatchers are usually seen in pairs or in small to medium-sized flocks. |
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The Thracians, who are the first inhabitants of what is today Bulgaria, were known to have had numerous sheep flocks. |
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Jays always initiated flock movement and, unlike other woodpeckers, flickers almost always followed the jay flocks when they moved. |
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Sheep have a thick woolly coat, usually live in groups as flocks, and are known for their timidity. |
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Here, flocks of fine wool-bearing merino sheep spread out and by 1880 it supported over 60 million sheep. |
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Macarthur's flocks were based on Spanish merinos and the term pure merino became a metaphor for colonial aristocracy. |
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Surveillance for West Nile is also conducted by testing pools of mosquitoes and flocks of sentinel chickens. |
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There were a few camels and traditional black Bedouin tents here and there with large flocks of sheep and goats nearby. |
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I hit a lull in April 2004, but toward the end was lucky enough to see a couple of flocks of blue-cheeked bee-eaters passing through the area. |
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Although the spring migration has barely begun, tens of thousands of geese and huge flocks of ducks are already here. |
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In fall the birds migrate south, many of them to the Extremadura region in central Spain, where they winter in huge flocks. |
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They are also partially migratory, and in the fall they can be seen traveling in flocks of more than a hundred birds. |
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Many birds in Washington are migratory, and others move to lowlands forming large winter flocks. |
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The early settlers kept small flocks from which they sheared wool that was needed to clothe their families to protect them from the severe cold. |
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In the summer, the wild mammals are joined by flocks of domestic sheep and goats left to graze in the meadows. |
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To one side was a rolling expanse of pasture land, clustered with flocks of sheep so thick that hundreds must graze there. |
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In 19 months there were 11 bombings of flocks of sheep with child shepherds on the plains in the middle of nowhere. |
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Vedic hymns were not composed by cowherd boys and shepherds while they were grazing their flocks of cattle, cows and sheep in the grass fields. |
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Clergy have a responsibility, as the shepherd of their flocks, to reach out to their followers. |
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Suddenly, she decides to spend her time as a shepherdess caring for her own flocks and now everyone can see her. |
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Norfolk is the best wintering county in the UK for shorelarks and small flocks could found at Snettisham, Holkham Gap and Caister-on-Sea. |
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They will also mob predators in flight, gathering into tight flocks and dive-bombing a hawk or other predator. |
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Members of the family Icteridae are known as troupials, meaning they have the habit of gathering into large flocks or troupes. |
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Mysterious maladies swept the flocks of chickens, the cattle and sheep sickened and died. |
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The entire tree seemed to be in motion, and more little flocks flew in all the time. |
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Some flocks may stay together through the breeding season as well, and birds will use bird feeders year round. |
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For many years, throughout the short winter days, large flocks of snow buntings were a feature in the Yarmouth area. |
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Waxwings are social birds and where suitable food supplies are found, flocks of several hundred birds have been recorded here. |
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Swifts tend to be social species and will feed and roost in large mixed-species flocks. |
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Pigeons and doves can be solitary to very social and can be found in flocks of several thousand. |
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Both methods allow the cost-effective sampling of broiler houses and subsequent detection of Salmonella-positive flocks. |
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From the 19th century onwards, it was not uncommon to see flocks of a thousand Southdowns on the large estates in the south. |
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With flocks, the problem is often caused by not using a nonstaining adhesive or by using inappropriate tools when hanging. |
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Most of it is grazed by flocks of sheep, goats, camels and cattle, often causing severe damage to vegetation. |
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On nearby fields I watched flocks of lapwing, golden plover and Canada geese. |
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I've got flocks of monotone peeping nuthatches in the spruce trees, along with the chickadees, blue jays and four Canada jays. |
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Some haplochromine cichlids of Lake Tanganyika are the sister group to the species flocks of Lakes Malawi and Victoria. |
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She was wearing a sweater she'd been forced to knit from the wool they'd carded from the flocks. |
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Pastured flocks and herds of meat animals, dairy herds, and poultry flocks will return, requiring, of course, pastures and hay fields. |
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Great Egrets can be found feeding in flocks of their own kind or with other herons. |
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The frozen meat trade also caused changes in the way the sheep farmers managed their flocks. |
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It is really heartbreaking to see flocks of buffaloes and oxen being taken to slaughterhouses tied together with ropes around their noses. |
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The sandpipers, surfbirds, and turnstones fly in separate flocks with each flock moving as one. |
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Four times that number of surfcasters sent lures and bait in the direction of the flocks of diving gulls, a sign of feeding fish. |
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In late summer and early fall, flocks of tiny finches and other seed-eating birds swoop in to graze among the spent blooms. |
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It's known for its great birdlife, with many small flocks of colourful scarlet-bellied mountain tanagers and sword-billed hummingbirds. |
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From autumn through to early spring large flocks of cirl buntings may be seen in the hedgerows. |
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Ring-necked pheasants, descendants from flocks released for a hunting estate in the nineteenth century, dart between clumps of phragmites. |
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Attacks by birds of prey on Scotland's flocks of racing pigeons are to be officially investigated for the first time. |
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Back at the start again it was noisy, with starlings, fieldfares, and flocks of young children. |
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The pipit flew overhead in noisy flocks and actually landed in the short grass long enough for the group to deploy a couple of scopes. |
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Figbirds feed in flocks, often of around 20 birds that are prepared to fly to isolated trees that are suitable for foraging. |
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The reference to 'spreading flocks' would more plausibly refer to the lambing season, in early spring, when flocks enlarge dramatically. |
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The young form flocks with other fledglings and adults when leaving the nesting area after breeding season. |
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The first Gambian bird I saw was pied crow, rapidly followed by small flocks of red-cheeked cordon-bleu finches. |
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Large flocks of unsuccessful breeders and immature birds concentrate in shallow wetlands to molt flight feathers. |
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Across the river you'll spot swooping eagles, bulbous 1000-year old boab trees, flocks of noisy corellas or silent stars. |
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Members of bird flocks and fish shoals check for predators less often and spend less time hiding in shelters than do solitary individuals. |
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Unfortunately, these birds fed in large flocks on fruit and other crops, and were shot in huge numbers by farmers. |
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Adan clutched onto me and screamed, disturbing the flocks of birds resting in trees nearby. |
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In late summer we checked for retained offspring among the first-year birds in flocks using behavior and DNA fingerprinting. |
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The area around Hawes and Leyburn became a temporary home to teams of men dedicated to culling whole cattle herds and sheep flocks. |
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Tall baked-mud walls enclose its fields and gardens, the trees twitch with little birds and shy women and girls tend flocks of sheep and goats. |
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So I can only empathise with farmers who have lost entire herds of cattle or flocks of sheep. |
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Their herds of cattle and flocks of sheep from New South Wales were eagerly bought by the early South Australian settlers. |
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When they beached the ships, they saw flocks of sheep and goats and they killed them for feasting. |
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There are the tents of nomads and flocks of sheep and goats with children and women in attendance. |
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Thereafter people came in flocks to carve caves to express their belief in the Buddhas. |
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And bishops must now persuade their flocks, since they can no longer command adherence to church teachings. |
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A cloud of birds flocks into the air, signifying the approach of someone or something. |
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Most of the producers own small flocks maintained on homestead pastures and in corrals. |
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Instead of holding individual territories, both species form coveys, which are flocks of 4-6 fused family groups. |
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He might as well claim, absurdly, that cowherds fatten their flocks for the good of the cows themselves. |
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Cowherds and shepherdesses wandered past with their flocks, shy and silent. |
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Here flocks of cranes, geese lapwings, curlews, cushats and other birds stop here during their transmigration. |
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Pigeon flocks have almost become a part of the furniture in York, with the birds gathering in most squares and open spaces. |
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The elimination of large flocks of birds was conducted with military precision to make sure that no trace of the virus was left behind. |
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Scalyleg and depluming mites are occasionally found on flocks in the state, particularly on farm flocks. |
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Outside the breeding season you will always find greenfinches in small flocks. |
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There were, however, large flocks of golden and green plover and curlew covering the fields. |
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Many of these raptor species are gregarious, which accounts for impressively large flocks of impressively large birds. |
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Rheas are gregarious in habit, and tend to live in flocks ranging in size from 5-30 individuals. |
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Western Grebes are highly gregarious in all seasons, wintering in large flocks and nesting in colonies. |
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Although they are frequently found in pairs, broadbills also tend to be quite gregarious and are often found in small feeding flocks. |
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It has a restful, out-of-the-way atmosphere and is named after the flocks of guineafowl that frequent the nearby field. |
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If domesticated flocks are worthy of eagle protection, surely nearly extinct endemic taxa are as well. |
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Redheads usually gather in small flocks, often mixed with other diving duck species. |
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It is also one of the top attractions for the flocks of visitors who visit the Wharfedale stately home and its extensive estate and grounds. |
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In addition, two isolates of Western equine encephalitis virus were found in the common culex mosquitoes, and St. Louis and Western virus activity was found in chicken flocks. |
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Through wire mesh, I watch the captive flocks pace out their confinement. |
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There they were to bring their burnt offerings and other sacrifices, tithes and contributions, offerings, and the firstlings of their herds and flocks. |
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By mid-July, adults and recently fledged young form small, loose flocks. |
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In the highlands, where pasture is scarce, herdboys often spend months alone with their flocks in a mountain valley some distance from their home. |
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On the other side they passed flocks of sheep, fleeced with snow. |
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Together they are a power couple that the public flocks to see perform. |
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But the intermediate seas were navigated by the wandering shepherd tribes, who sometimes pastured their flocks by the waters of the Indus, sometimes by the waters of the Nile. |
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They scan the flocks of seabirds and waders and warblers intently, because they know that, in the midst of a thousand common birds, there may be one rare bird hitching a ride. |
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The ngosha is a small but very numerous granivorous bird that sweeps over the sky in flocks like small clouds and descends on grain fields to feast. |
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As we paddled across clear water, we caught sight of purple jellyfish below us, herons and oystercatchers on adjacent rocks and flocks of seagulls. |
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Flying north through the lush green agricultural lands bordering the Tigris I watched hundred of egrets along with small flocks of rooks and hooded crows. |
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In May, the rare dotterel is found in small flocks, called trips. |
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Their tendency to roost in tight flocks and be easily attracted to decoys may have made them vulnerable to market hunters, who had a significant impact on the population. |
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There were many times when I envied the moral clarity of those priests as they tended their flocks of young believers, incessantly preaching the demands of sexual purity. |
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It is nature's twilight zone, a place that has repulsed all human efforts to mine or farm it, or denude it with herds of cattle or flocks of sheep. |
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Turkey farmers in the UK are in a panic over blackhead disease, fearing an outbreak among their flocks after the drug they used to rely on was banned. |
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Leaving the OR that night, I looked up the clear sky, at the flocks of white seagulls and a sliver of crescent moon. |
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From 1998 to 2001 the virus went through multiple reassortments and moved back to domestic birds, spreading almost unnoticed in Chinese chicken flocks. |
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So they're rushing in trying to vaccinate their chicken flocks, and they're also trying to get some Tamiflu, which is a drug for people who might be handling them. |
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They leased uncultivated land to the owners of huge flocks of sheep. |
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Beneath us, the grass-covered, flat-roofed huts of Gujjar shepherds, the flocks of woolly sheep, the sturdy ponies and their handlers all headed to Kongdori. |
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It is this habit that has made flocks manageable on large unfenced commons and has helped keep sheep evenly distributed across the land, preventing localised overgrazing. |
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The loss of genetic diversity could result in animals with weakened immune systems, unable to resist infections that may wipe out whole flocks or herds. |
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Almost everywhere you look in Guanacaste Province there are pairs, trios, or small flocks of Groove-billed Anis, birds that superficially resemble blackbirds. |
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We skirted around water buffalo, flocks of chickens and barking dogs. |
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In non-breeding season, starlings form large flocks capable of much noise and, well, let's just say you don't want to park your car under one of their roosts. |
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Nestled in the hills of California's San Joaquin Valley, a tranquil pond invites flocks of ruddy ducks, pintails, and shovelers to feed at its shores. |
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Pewees and Alder Flycatchers do not join flocks but set up territories in patches of forest that they defend against members of their own species. |
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Today, the public considers the Impressionists to be traditional painters and flocks in record numbers to view their works on display in museums around the world. |
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The flocks on the old folk's home took flight and circled the street. |
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Lambs which drink sufficient colostrum soon after birth will be protected from a disease common in intensive indoor lambing flocks in Pembrokeshire. |
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Dease's journal provides accounts of wandering flocks of pigeons depredating barley crops at Fort Simpson, far to the north of their known breeding range. |
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Coots, ducks and flamingos clustered around the fringes of shallow tarns whilst great flocks of upland geese, buff-necked ibis and lapwing settled on the plains to feed. |
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The last thing poultry producers want their flocks hit with is exotic Newcastle disease, a contagious and fatal viral disease affecting most species of birds. |
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Marked birds were resighted, using sporting scopes, during 1-4 h scanning surveys of Western Sandpiper flocks made on high-low spring tides throughout each season. |
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As the dinghy approaches the shores of North Avon Island, flocks of sooty and noddy terns swirl up and wheel above the dinghy, squawking loudly at our intrusion. |
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Rufous vangas live in groups of four to eight, and may join in mixed-species feeding flocks with other vangas or with bird species other than vangas. |
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At dawn for the past two mornings, great scraggly flocks of rooks mixed with a few jackdaws pour over our base moving from their roosts to the freshly plowed fields. |
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Bird flu continued its seemingly inexorable march through Asia, as Indonesia on Tuesday found a strain of the virus in its poultry flocks that can be deadly to humans. |
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The pastoral eclogue in its simplest form is a dialogue between shepherds about love and death, which they engage in while tending their flocks in a rustic setting. |
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With the help of other concerned citizens, they eventually succeeded in gaining a permit to graze their flocks on 14 sections of Forest Service land. |
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In winter, our resident population is increased by large numbers of birds from the Continent, forming flocks on farmland, often with other finches, buntings and sparrows. |
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There may have been some interesting birds hidden behind the flocks of Canada Geese and American Black Duck, but we were too cold to puzzle them out. |
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Britain's Cold War spymasters secretly discussed plans to train flocks of homing pigeons to attack enemy targets with tiny but deadly biological weapons. |
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Using gliders, balloons, planes and helicopters, each shot is closer to the flocks of birds in flight than most people have ever been to a feathered friend on the ground. |
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Huge flocks of sheep and goats in the northwest are stripping the land of its protective vegetation, creating a dust bowl on a scale not seen before. |
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Thus seven bishops petitioned him explaining why they would not obey his order to instruct their clergy to read the Declaration of Indulgence to their flocks. |
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Especially in developing countries, such flocks may be a part of subsistence agriculture rather than a system of trade. |
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The sands or mudflats with dangerous quicksands became a grass meadow now grazed by small flocks of sheep. |
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Buzzards do not normally form flocks, but several may be seen together on migration or in good habitat. |
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The Victorian writer on Dartmoor, William Crossing, noted he had on occasions seen flocks of 15 or more at some places. |
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There are approximately 1,200 flocks of pedigree Swaledale sheep in the United Kingdom. |
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It is territorial and normally seen alone or in pairs, although loose flocks may form on migration. |
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Sheep farms are most often situated in the country's mountains and moorlands, where sheepdogs are employed to round up flocks. |
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Large flocks of sheep were owned by Cistercian abbeys and monasteries, such as those at Strata Florida, Margam, Basingwerk and Tintern. |
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In the 1840s, the hills of Montgomeryshire included flocks from the low country. |
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Most flocks are descended from sheep that have grazed the same mountains for generations. |
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Many flocks of white Welsh Mountains contain one or two black sheep, but these sheep are now also bred as a consistent black variety. |
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The island has also long been used for grazing flocks of indigenous Sardinian sheep. |
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Fishermen looked for feeding tern flocks, since the birds could lead them to fish shoals. |
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They are gregarious birds, travelling in flocks, hunting cooperatively and breeding colonially. |
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The sea breaks upon this coast against a palisadoed fence of rocks and cliffs, around which swarm flocks of polar birds with cries and screams. |
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It is gregarious at all seasons when feeding, often forming flocks with other types of birds. |
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The house sparrow feeds mostly on the ground, but it flocks in trees and bushes. |
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Common pheasants are gregarious birds and outside the breeding season form loose flocks. |
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Granivorous birds such as the queleas in Africa are among the most numerous birds in the world and foraging flocks can cause devastation. |
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This transition from hunting and gathering to herding flocks and growing crops was a major step in human history. |
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It is located next to the ocean and is home to flocks of ducks and other birds. |
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However, colored sheep do appear in many modern breeds, and may even appear as a recessive trait in white flocks. |
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Lambs learn the heft from ewes and if whole flocks are culled it must be retaught to the replacement animals. |
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Many buyers avoid outlets known to be clearing houses for animals culled from healthy flocks as either sick or simply inferior. |
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Both external and internal parasites are the most prevalent malady in sheep, and are either fatal, or reduce the productivity of flocks. |
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China, Australia, India, and Iran have the largest modern flocks, and serve both local and exportation needs for wool and mutton. |
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Other countries such as New Zealand have smaller flocks but retain a large international economic impact due to their export of sheep products. |
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There are 8 or 10 beds in each room, chiefly of flocks, and consequently retentive of all scents and very productive of vermin. |
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The dunlin is highly gregarious in winter, sometimes forming large flocks on coastal mudflats or sandy beaches. |
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Twites can form large flocks outside the breeding season, sometimes mixed with other finches on coasts and salt marshes. |
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Innumerable flocks and herbs covered that vast expanse of emerald meadow saturated with the moisture of the Atlantic. |
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A poor man has but one ewe, and this grandee sheep-biter leaves whole flocks of fat wethers, whom he may knock down, to deuour this. |
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He recorded the alarm cries of the shrike-tanager and of the bluish-slate antshrike, the sentinel species of the understory flocks. |
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Breeders wishing to change the prolificacy of their flocks are advised to use the Litter Size EBV when making selection decisions. |
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They will go the way of the vast flocks of the Passenger Pigeon and the Carolina Parakeet which were reduced to extinction in 100 years. |
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Pieced together from footage shot over eight years, Sweetgrass follows shepherds as they herd their flocks through Montana's Beartooth Mountains. |
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In winter flocks, for example, females solicit attention from high-ranking males. |
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In the air, the sandgrouse were fast and confusing, speeding through in tight flocks before swirling round to pitch down. |
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Nearby Morfa Bychan beach has also provided some good birdwatching with long tailed duck, scaup and velvet scoter among flocks of common scoter. |
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Border collies are known for their high energy levels and organisational abilities that are normally put to use herding flocks of sheep. |
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We watched flocks of wild turkey, herds of deer, counting the younglings each spring. |
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Before long we'll start to see some arrivals too, such as the flocks of redwings that fly south from Scandinavia and Iceland. |
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And, in the last year or so, flocks numbering as many as forty birds have been seen in the upper forests of Matelot and Madamas. |
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Above us we can see flocks of arkars, which gaze down upon us. Our presence surprises but does not apparently alarm them. |
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The shepherds of the Golden Age let their flocks out to pasture without fearing the abigeat, they feared only the wild beasts. |
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There were snipe in countless myriads, and wild geese in flocks that rose from the jeel with a roar like a goods train crossing an iron bridge. |
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In that part of the world which was first inhabited, even as low down as Abraham's time, they wandered with their flocks and herds. |
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There are several flocks on the island and others have been started in England and Jersey. |
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The reason for these wide roads to was to prevent excessive churning of the road bed, and allow easy movement of flocks and herds of animals. |
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As it rots, the sand flies it abounds in provide rich feeding for flocks of starlings and other passerines, wintering waders, gulls and others. |
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It will form flocks outside the breeding season, often mixed with other crossbills. |
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During the Middle Ages, many Vlachs were shepherds who drove their flocks through the mountains of Central and Eastern Europe. |
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This seems to refer to transhumance, or seasonal movement of shepherds with their flocks, and if so is the earliest mention in Britain. |
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The bird catches food off the surface or by pursuit diving, and forages alone or in small flocks. |
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Being a hardy breed, farmers are able to rear their Swaledale flocks in remote and exposed locations, generally without needing to provide indoor accommodation. |
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The farmers allegedly intentionally introduced FMD to their flocks, because the payment offered to farmers for culled swine was at the time higher than their market value. |
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It tends to gather in large flocks and winter in open areas, agricultural plains, ploughed land, and short meadows, ranging from Europe to North Africa. |
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Large flocks of pigeons and starlings in cities are often considered as a nuisance and techniques to reduce their populations or their impacts are constantly innovated. |
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An approach to identify migration intensity makes use of upward pointing microphones to record the nocturnal contact calls of flocks flying overhead. |
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An older technique to quantify migration involves observing the face of the moon towards full moon and counting the silhouettes of flocks of birds as they fly at night. |
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Many modern birds are highly social, often found living in flocks. |
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None of the flocks showed symptoms of an acute or chronic streptococcosis. |
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Their 420-acre arable farm has become a haven for brown hares and birds, including skylarks, tree sparrows, buzzards, barn owls and flocks of goldfinches. |
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And during the winter, flocks of penguins migrate from Antarctica. |
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To compound matters, lamb prices have soared recently, largely as a result of the sheep-breeding flocks in the UK and New Zealant becoming smaller. |
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In the wild, orange-fronted conures live in dynamic flocks where individuals flit in and out, so each parrot encounters many different individuals every day. |
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China's peacock farms can contain flocks of up to 10,000 birds, with each peacock typically kept with four or five peahens in a five square metre pen. |
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There are also several flocks of sheep that are grazed on the mountain. |
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The migratory birds include mallards, teals, shovellers, gadwalls, pochards, a few flocks of Greylag Geese and Ruddy Shelducks are seen at this sanctuary. |
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The griffon vulture is a gregarious bird often roosting in flocks. |
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This day we saw some scattered tents of Mongalians, with their flocks. |
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During two subsequent walking transects, perpendicular to and intersecting the flight path of the Bobolink flocks, I flushed Pyralid moths with every step. |
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Between the singles, pairs and small flocks of harlequins and scoters, the occasional oldsquaw would swing inside our bay, but never truly commit to the decoys. |
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First stop was Lake Manyara Park, a rift valley soda lake with a shoreline outlined in pink by flocks of lesser flamingo, the land rising up to thickly wooded mountains. |
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The sheep and cattle gather in flocks and herds under the shade of gum trees, moving little, saving energy, braced against the searing sun by a thin cupola of leaves. |
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Poultry farmers also maintain strict biosecurity measures year-round keep their flocks protected from wild birds and routinely test flocks for avian influenza. |
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He also has flocks of seed-eating birds such as linnet and yellowhammer, and rare wild plants such as meadow saffron, greater butterfly orchid and herb paris. |
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