Large-billed reed warbler
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− | Afghanistan’s fledging conservation | + | Afghanistan’s fledging conservation agency moved on Sunday to protect one of the world’s rarest birds after the species was rediscovered in the war-ravaged country’s northeast. The remote Pamir Mountains are the only known breeding area of the large billed reed warbler, a species so elusive that it had been documented only twice before in more than a century. A researcher with the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society stumbled upon the tiny bird in 2008 and taped its distinctive song. Later, a research team caught and released 20 of the birds — the largest number ever recorded. On Sunday, Afghanistan’s National Environment Protection Agency added the large-billed reed warbler to its list of protected species. |
Revision as of 20:14, 8 November 2013
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‘Extinct’ bird rediscovered in Afghanistan’s mountains
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This is a newspaper article selected for the excellence of its content. |
Afghanistan’s fledging conservation agency moved on Sunday to protect one of the world’s rarest birds after the species was rediscovered in the war-ravaged country’s northeast. The remote Pamir Mountains are the only known breeding area of the large billed reed warbler, a species so elusive that it had been documented only twice before in more than a century. A researcher with the New York-based Wildlife Conservation Society stumbled upon the tiny bird in 2008 and taped its distinctive song. Later, a research team caught and released 20 of the birds — the largest number ever recorded. On Sunday, Afghanistan’s National Environment Protection Agency added the large-billed reed warbler to its list of protected species.