The life history, breeding biology and field methods are described elsewhere for white-tailed ptarmigan and willow ptarmigan. |
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Many species of birds live here, including chickadees, hummingbirds, grey jays, red-tailed hawks, ptarmigan and golden eagles. |
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Flocks of migratory shorebirds are yet to arrive, but small coveys of rock ptarmigan are already roaming about. |
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They also support a number of threatened and endangered bird species like the capercaillie, the osprey, and the ptarmigan. |
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Early morning is a great time to observe wildlife, and very soon we saw moose, bald eagles, red foxes, and ptarmigan. |
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Willow ptarmigan, rock ptarmigan and spruce grouse are a few of the ground-dwelling birds. |
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In winter, the ptarmigan is covered by a pure white mass of feathers which blend seamlessly with snow. |
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The behaviour we observed was similar to the behaviour of polar bears hunting seals and willow ptarmigan. |
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Large birds including ptarmigan and waterfowl are the most common prey item of the Gyrfalcon. |
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The ptarmigan also alludes to the martlet crest used by Hansons in the United States, and therefore to Mr. Hanson's family heritage. |
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We expected the extensive annual variation in the timing of environmental variables to correlate with timing of breeding as reported earlier for willow ptarmigan. |
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Still following the sure footing of rocky drainages, we flushed ptarmigan from the willows as we went, at one point rousting several hundred of them. |
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The unikkaaqtuaq of the ptarmigan myth made children squeamish about baby lemmings. |
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Conspicuous land birds include the horned lark, hoary redpoll, snow bunting and willow ptarmigan. |
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Morning brought beautiful winter weather, sparkling sunshine, no wind, and the chirping of rock ptarmigan in the distance. |
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Some representative birds include red-throated loon, brant, oldsquaw, gyrfalcon, willow and rock ptarmigan, and snowy owl. |
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The marine coastline is extremely important to bird habitat and migration, and Ross's gulls, snow geese, Canada geese, ducks, and ptarmigan are abundant. |
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Other wild meats, such as the Arctic hare, muskox, bear, walrus, geese and ptarmigan, add variety and other essential vitamins and minerals. |
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Hunting caribou, ptarmigan, fox and hare, collecting berries and travelling back and forth to Iqaluit, all depend on the Soper River valley. |
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Everything on the menu was called what it was: narwhal, walrus, ptarmigan, pemmican and musk ox. |
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Bird species include peregrine and gyrfalcon, eagles, ruffed grouse, rock ptarmigan, loons, ducks and swans. |
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Hawks, particularly the rough-legged hawk and gyrfalcon, wheel and soar through the air on the lookout for lemmings or young ptarmigan. |
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If we had a midwife, she would keep the sealskin, or if it was a ptarmigan, she kept the skin as well. |
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For widgeon, snipe and ptarmigan, and for belted Galloway cattle, from their own estates. |
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This was no bear, however, but the beady-eyed state bird of Alaska, the ptarmigan. |
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The only contaminant found in slightly higher levels was a heavy metal called cadmium, which can concentrate in the kidney of ptarmigan. |
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According to historic accounts, the ptarmigan provides the properties of speed and endurance as a runner. |
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During their first two to three weeks of life, ptarmigan chicks have a downy plumage of intricate yellow, brown, grey, and chestnut patterns. |
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Mammals grow thicker fur coats, and birds, like the ptarmigan, fluff out with more feathers for insulation. |
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All living things, including ptarmigan and grouse, contain some contaminants, but they are still very healthy and nutritious. |
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Smokers could consider quitting smoking, rather than avoid eating ptarmigan kidney, to lower their risk of cadmium exposure. |
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Naturally, the desire to hunt ptarmigan with a smallbore rif le was also there, but a char or two wouldn't hurt. |
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Since ptarmigan and grouse are plant and insect eaters they are low on the food chain. |
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There are health risks if a piece of lead shot is accidentally swallowed when eating ptarmigan or grouse. |
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Snow depth and spring temperatures in April and May had little impact on breeding phenology of alpine ptarmigan, but delayed snowmelt in June 1995 caused hardship. |
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On the menu was ptarmigan breast baked in horn of plenty mushrooms with caramelised apples, poached onions and broad beans, served with Calvados sauce and potato cake. |
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This fauna, together with the vegetation that feeds the lemming, ptarmigan, and caribou, forms a tight ecological system that is virtually self-sufficient. |
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The rock ptarmigan becomes sexually mature at six months of age and commonly has up to six chicks. |
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This fact sheet will describe what types of contaminants can be found in ptarmigan and grouse, how they get there, and what this means to the health of the people who eat them. |
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Rock ptarmigan meat is a popular part of festive meals in Icelandic cuisine. |
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For this reason, the current status of grouse and ptarmigan can best be determined by extrapolating trends from the boreal taiga that extends to the south and from harvest statistics. |
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They awaken emotions and furthermore, it is much easier to identify with a capercaillie or a rock ptarmigan than with a mushroom or an insect, even if the latter are much more endangered. |
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Vincent Lemieux, a notoriously successful fraud artist wanted by police, goes ptarmigan hunting in the taiga of northern Québec as a pretext for skipping the country. |
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Apart from reindeer, which are herded by the indigenous population, the main animal species are the Arctic foxes, musk oxen, beavers, lemmings, snowy owls, and ptarmigan. |
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Some birds stay, like ravens, snowy owls and ptarmigan. |
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Studies have found that most contaminants are present at such low levels that they are not considered health risks to ptarmigan and grouse or to the people who eat them. |
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It is usually classified as a subspecies of the willow ptarmigan but is sometimes considered to be a separate species, Lagopus scotica. |
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So far, ecotourism does not appear to have caused a measurable decline in ptarmigan populations, but it has inadvertently contributed to the destruction of their often fragile habitat. |
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Many, if not most, quail and partridge are monogamous, as are ptarmigan, guinea fowl, the hoatzin, some pheasant, and those megapodes and cracids that have been studied. |
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Some species, such as the snowy owl, ptarmigan and hoary redpoll, are year-round residents and have developed strategies to survive the cold and lack of daylight. |
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While we drove the snowmobile in the darkness and looked for a stream, we kept running into ptarmigan that rose like white ghosts in the glow of the snowmobile's lights. |
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In another northern species, ptarmigan, such a see-saw pattern between warring and peacing has indeed been observed by researchers. |
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In Alaska, wild game like ptarmigan and moose meat feature extensively since much of the state is wilderness. |
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Although all three ptarmigan species have been studied by scientists, their levels of tolerance to human-induced changes remain largely unknown, as do many other aspects of their biology. |
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Willow ptarmigan prefer moderately moist lowland areas rich in low willows Salix or birches Betula and ericaceous shrubs, mosses, grasses, and herbs, and more rarely use steep slopes, rocky areas, and lichen-rich tundra. |
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On the face of it, this was pseudo-science to illustrate the hardiness of the ptarmigan, a bird which buries itself in snow to stay warm. |
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On the high mountain tops, species including ptarmigan, mountain hare and stoat can be seen in their white colour phase during winter months. |
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Park wildlife includes caribou, grizzly bear, wolverine, wolf, mink, moose, muskrat, gyrfalcon, peregrine falcon, golden eagle and rock and willow ptarmigan. |
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In 1981 there were 28 ptarmigan on Arran, but in 2009 it was reported that extensive surveys had been unable to record any. |
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The rock ptarmigan feeds primarily on birch and willow buds and catkins when available. |
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You may hunt and possess wild turkey, pheasant, ruffed grouse, sharp-tailed grouse, spruce grouse, ptarmigan, Hungarian partridge and northern bobwhite. |
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Apart from the comb, the male rock ptarmigan has no ornaments or displays that are typical for grouses in temperate regions. |
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The rock ptarmigan is the official bird of Nunavut, and the purple saxifrage is the official floral emblem, a sign of spring and a source of food. The five flowers indicate Commissioner Hanson's five daughters. |
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Other species of grouse include the ptarmigan, found only at higher elevations, and the large capercaillie, which has been reintroduced into Scotland's pine woodlands. |
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Hunting has been allowed again since 2005, but is restricted to selected days, which are revised yearly and all trade of rock ptarmigan is illegal. |
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The red grouse is differentiated from the willow ptarmigan and rock ptarmigan by its plumage being reddish brown, and not having a white winter plumage. |
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Several plains states, from South Dakota down through New Mexico, also have prairie chickens and in Colorado's high mountains you can hunt white-tailed ptarmigan. |
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