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鹭、黑琵鷺、琵琶嘴鹭,俗稱飯匙鳥、黑面勺嘴,台灣賞鳥人士則暱稱為「黑琵」。 黑面琵鷺- 維基百科,自由嘅百科全書 - Wikipedia
zh-yue.wikipedia.org/wiki/黑面琵鷺Translate this page同中國樂器中嘅琵琶極之相似,所以有個咁嘅名;亦因為佢姿態優雅,又俾人讚做「 ...
Record number of black-faced spoonbills spotted in Taiwan
2014/02/01 14:38:10
(CNA file photo)
Taipei, Feb. 1 (CNA) A record high of 1,659 black-faced spoonbills have been documented in Taiwan this year, a 2.11 percent increase over the previous year, according to an annual census.
The census, part of a worldwide bird-count initiated by the Hong Kong Bird Watching Society and taken Jan. 18-19 this year, found 1,246 black-faced spoonbills in southern Taiwan's Tainan and 215 in central Taiwan's Chiayi, according to the Taipei-based Chinese Wild Bird Federation.
Tainan, where Taijiang National Park is located, is one of the most important global wintering sites for the endangered birds, it said.
Bird conservation experts, however, have discovered that the number of black-faced spoonbills in Tainan are reaching their upper limit and, as a result, are spreading to new habitats in neighboring Chiayi and Kaohsiung.
"We have found a slight expansion of the birds' habitats, which means that they might have been adapting to a changing environment along the west coast," said federation official Hung Kuan-chieh.
The birds have also been spotted in northern Taiwan's Hsinchu, southern Taiwan's Pingtung and the outlying Kinmen County and Dongsha Islands -- the first time the birds have been seen in these areas.
The global figures will likely be released after Hong Kong has compiled the data from participating countries of the census, including South Korea, China and Japan.
The number of black-faced spoonbills in Taiwan accounts for 50-60 percent of the bird's global population, according to previous censuses.
(By Lee Hsin-Yin)
The census, part of a worldwide bird-count initiated by the Hong Kong Bird Watching Society and taken Jan. 18-19 this year, found 1,246 black-faced spoonbills in southern Taiwan's Tainan and 215 in central Taiwan's Chiayi, according to the Taipei-based Chinese Wild Bird Federation.
Tainan, where Taijiang National Park is located, is one of the most important global wintering sites for the endangered birds, it said.
Bird conservation experts, however, have discovered that the number of black-faced spoonbills in Tainan are reaching their upper limit and, as a result, are spreading to new habitats in neighboring Chiayi and Kaohsiung.
"We have found a slight expansion of the birds' habitats, which means that they might have been adapting to a changing environment along the west coast," said federation official Hung Kuan-chieh.
The birds have also been spotted in northern Taiwan's Hsinchu, southern Taiwan's Pingtung and the outlying Kinmen County and Dongsha Islands -- the first time the birds have been seen in these areas.
The global figures will likely be released after Hong Kong has compiled the data from participating countries of the census, including South Korea, China and Japan.
The number of black-faced spoonbills in Taiwan accounts for 50-60 percent of the bird's global population, according to previous censuses.
(By Lee Hsin-Yin)
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