Bird-Watching and Ornithology

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Mainly birdwatching pix and ID help; please post approximate location (country/region/at least give us a continent!) - moderators needed (eventually?)

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kos / common blackbird / Turdus merula

Photo by Cyanistes and shared on PixelFed.

Image licensed CC BY-NC-SA

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Gawron / Rook / Corvus frugilegus

Photo by Cyanistes and shared on PixelFed.

Image licensed CC BY-NC-SA

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Modraszka / Blue Tit / Cyanistes caeruleus

Photo by Cyanistes and shared on PixelFed.

Image licensed CC BY-NC-SA

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If this don't fit just let me know Normally we have 2 or 3 families of blue jays around the property, but they've been gone.

A few stopped coming around mid November, then the rest were gone late November, not even hearing them.

I know they got weird migration patterns but I just wanted to check if that was a normal time for them to leave? I'm in midwest/south US

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Puteketeke (live.staticflickr.com)
submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Photo by Steve Attwood, New Zealand 2017

The Puteketeke is the front-runner in New Zealand's Bird of the Century contest thanks to John Oliver.

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submitted 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Photograph by John Bloomfield taken in the New Jersey Meadowlands in August 2016.

American Ornithological Society is changing the names of birds named after people. After being petitioned to change the names of several named after Slave owners and racists, they decided to blanket change all names regardless of culpability.

I welcome their rationale:

Months later, the members came to the realization that all eponymous names were problematic. “They imply possession of a species,” Nol said. “They are overwhelmingly from a particular time and social fabric, they are almost all White men, few women, and women were almost all first names. Our main goal was to increase the birdwatching public."

While many of the eponymous birds are losing the names of racists and slaveowners, it should be noted that Alexander Wilson, a weaver who lived most of his life in poverty and was forced to emigrate after his satirical poetry enraged a British capitalist, seems to be an outlier from this group.

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Siamese Fireback (upload.wikimedia.org)
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Via Wikimedia Commons

Photo by Amada44, taken in August 2012 in a Florida Zoo.

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The American Ornithological Society says it will alter the names of North American birds named after humans, starting with up to 80 of them.

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Roseate Spoonbill (live.staticflickr.com)
submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 
 

Photographed by Greg Lavaty on June 8, 2020 at High Island in Galveston County, Texas

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