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عدد الرسائل : 644 تاريخ التسجيل : 27/08/2008
| موضوع: جميع اصوات الطيور وكل طير صوتة جنبة - 4 - الجمعة 4 سبتمبر - 0:14 | |
| | | Summer visitor to sandy or stony heaths. The almost complete lack of streaks on the underparts is one of the best ways to tell a Tawny Pipit which also looks bigger and leggier than other pipits. The pale sandy plumage, bold eyestripe and prominent line of black feathers on the median coverts are also useful features. Juveniles are similar to Richard's Pipits, but are slimmer with a distinctive dark line from the bill to the eye.
Large numbers in Turkey. | IMAGE
| | Scientific Name | English Name | Turkish Name | motacilla flava | yellow wagtail | sari kuruksallayan | | Breeds in damp, rushy pastures, water meadows and hay fields. The races which have grey heads may look superficially like Grey Wagtails but they usually have greener or browner backs. The shorter tails and different calls of the yellow wagtails are always conclusive. | passeriformes > turdidae | chats and thrushes • ardicgiller | IMAGE
| | Scientific Name | English Name | Turkish Name | luscinia megarhynchos | nightingale | bulbul | | When a Nightingale does become visible it is seen to be a rather disappointing plain brown bird characterised only by whiter underparts, a richer chestnut colour on the tail and a conspicuous large, black, staring eye accentuated by a white eye ring.
Breeds in woodland, copses and thickets with lush undergrowth. | IMAGE
| . | Scientific Name | English Name | Turkish Name | irania gutturalis | white-throated robin | tas bulbulu | | Breeds in rocky hillsides with scattered bushes. Male White-throated Robins are unmistakable; grey-blue above, orange below and with an immaculate black-and-white face pattern. Females aren’t so immediately recognisable; their grey upperparts and orange flanks might bring to mind Red-flanked Bluetail but the robin looks more like a small thrush or large nightingale and it has a black tail and prominent white undertail feathers.
5,000 breeding pairs in southern Turkey, part of a larger population distributed across Asia Minor. | IMAGE
| | Scientific Name | English Name | Turkish Name | cercotrichas galactotes | rufous bush chat | cali bulbulu | | (also. Rufous-tailed Scrub Robin)
Breeds in cultivated areas such as olive-groves and orchards and areas of scrubby vegatation such as dry river beds. Often comes into open areas such as clearings or tracks. The long, broad rufous tail with black-edged white spots at the tip is diagnostic if seen. Otherwise, the most striking feature is the head pattern, not just the pale supercilium, but also the bold dark eyestripe and faint moustachial line which gives the face a smirking expression. | IMAGE
| | Scientific Name | English Name | Turkish Name | phoenicurus phoenicurus | redstart (common) | kizilkuyruk | | Male Redstarts are delightfully gaudy birds, especially when flashing their red tails, trying to attract their partner to a potential nest site. The eye-catching red tail separates the Redstart from all other small birds except the darker, duller Black Redstart. Even the dullest female Redstarts have a pale throat and hints of orange in their underparts, unlike Black Redstarts.
Breeds mostly in deciduous woods, but also on heaths, parkland and moorland edges. | IMAGE
| | Scientific Name | English Name | Turkish Name | oenanthe oenanthe | wheatear (common) | kuyrukkakan | | (also. northern wheatear) Breeds in holes in the ground or in walls in areas of short turf such as moors, downs and cliff-tops. It is said that the name Wheatear derives from the expression 'white arse', a perfect description of how this bird appears as it flies away. Indeed, it is the white rump contrasting with the inverted black 'T' in the tail which separates a Wheatear in any plumage from all other British birds. Males in spring are handsome birds with blue-grey backs and black eye masks. Females and first winter birds are brown above and usually lack the dark eye patch. | passeriformes > sylviidae | old world warblers • otlegengiller | IMAGE
| | Scientific Name | English Name | Turkish Name | locustella luscinioides | savi's warbler | bataklik kamiscini | | Breeds mostly in reedbeds, especially phragmites, with scattered bushes. If you see a Savi's Warbler it should be easily separated from a Grasshopper Warbler by its bulky size, lack of dark alaua eye-line, hardly any markings under the tail and, above all, a complete lack of streaks in its plumage. This unstreaked appearance could lead to confusion with the Reed Warbler but even a silent Savi's can be told by its colder, duller brown plumage, bigger body, smaller rounded head and finer less obvious bill. The neat white pencil-line of an eyestripe is distinctive, if visible. | IMAGE
| | Scientific Name | English Name | Turkish Name | acrocephalus scirpaceus | reed warbler | saz kamiscini |
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