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ROOSTS
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- These often form large flocks in the winter that gathering to feed or at dusk flying off together to form large roosts.
- It is a noisy bird, especially in communal roosts and other gregarious situations, with an unmusical but varied song.
- Before sleeping in communal roosts, common mynas vocalise in unison, which is known as "communal noise".
- How great it was there I do not know, but I know that it was very dark where I then was in New-Jersey; so much so that the fowls went to their roosts, the cocks crew and the whip-poor-wills sung their usual serenade; the people had to light candles in their houses to enable them to see to carry on their usual business; the night was as uncommonly dark as the day was.
- Pōhutukawa was chosen as the main tree as it would eventually provide perches and roosts for birds who would then excrete the seed of the fruits that they had been eating, which would then germinate around the pōhutukawa.
- Even in roosts that are more stringently protected from poaching, it is still affected by human disturbance via tourists who intentionally disturb them during the day.
- Tattershall Carrs is a remnant of ancient alder woodland, with bat roosts made of converted bomb shelters.
- It inhabits a dry desert-like shrubby environment known as caatinga, and roosts and nests in cavities in sandstone cliffs.
- It will form groups to attack potential predators, such as dogs, mongooses or humans, and at night it roosts colonially.
- A colony of nationally Threatened Grey-headed flying foxes (pteropus poliocephalus) roosts along the river in poplars adjacent to Riverine St.
- The Puerto Rican tody, unlike other Coraciiformes, roosts alone in trees both during the day and at nighttime.
- OSM will encourage the States and Tribes to do the same; and (5) Promote the education of OSM staff, State agencies, and Indian Tribes as to: the beneficial aspects of conserving bats, tested methods to safeguard bat habitat and public health, and ways to mitigate for loss of bat roosts and habitat.
- Night-roosting cover: scaled quail roosts were observed in yucca (Yucca angustifolia), tree cholla, and true mountain-mahogany (Cercocarpus montanus)-yucca-fragrant sumac (Rhus aromatica) vegetation types.
- The branches of mangroves serve as roosts and rookeries for coastal and wading birds, such as the brown pelican (Oelicanus occidentalis), roseate spoonbill (Ajajia ajaia), frigatebird (Fregata magnificans), double-crested cormorant (Phalacrocorax carbo), belted kingfisher (Megaceryle alcyon), brown noddy (Anous stolidus), great white heron and Wurdemann's heron, color phases of the great blue heron (Adrea herodias), osprey (Pandion haliaetus), snowy egret (Egretta thula), green heron (Butorides striatus), reddish egret (Dichromanassa rufescens) and greater yellowlegs (Tringa melanoleuca).
- Aerial insectivores, Cyttarops alecto roosts in small groups of one to ten individuals of both sexes and mixed ages under fronds of coco palms during the day.
- A martlet in English heraldry is a mythical bird without feet that never roosts from the moment of its drop-birth until its death fall; martlets are proposed to be continuously on the wing.
- While in the harem roosts, males often do not enter torpor, but stay awake and mobile to defend the females from other males trying to copulate.
- The lesser sooty owl roosts in scented melaleuca (Melaleuca squarrosa), rough tree fern (Cyathea australis), tall saw-sedge (Gahnia aspera), mountain grey gum (Eucalyptus cypellocarpa), yertchuk (Eucalyptus consideniana), Victorian eurabbie (Eucalyptus pseudoglobulus), Silvertop ash (Eucalyptus sieberi) red ironbark (Eucalyptus tricarpa) and manna gum (Eucalyptus viminalis).
- However, as with many vespertilionid bats of northern Australia, the population seem to have become geographically isolated by the Gulf of Carpentaria, which lacks caves and suitable trees for roosts.
- They sometimes share their roosts with least petrels (Halocyptena microsoma) and black petrels (Oceanodroma melania).
- They are generally quiet and do not make many vocalisations apart from a distinctive whooshing noise while leaving their high-altitude roosts to feed in the morning.
- It is typically found in grassy areas near treeline but roosts in Polylepis woodland and Puya stands.
- The common name of gibberbird was given as a reflection of the gibber plains that make up the primary habitat for the species and unlike other chat species, the gibberbird is almost completely terrestrial, at ease on the ground level where it feeds, roosts and nests.
- However, some local populations may be threatened by overharvesting for bushmeat, habitat loss via deforestation, cave disturbance, and persecution of its roosts due to the perception that it is a pest.
- It also shares its roosts with other bat species such as the great roundleaf bat, Hipposideros armiger.
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