Snow Bunting

This chapter details the author's experience walking along the mud and rock edges of the Ashokan Reservoir to look for a Snow Bunting. Since the water from the Ashokan Reservoir glides south for over one hundred miles to supply New York City, the reservoir and the land around it are protected....

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Main Author: Rogers, Susan Fox
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Cornell University Press 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501762246.003.0002
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spelling crcornellup:10.7591/cornell/9781501762246.003.0002 2024-06-09T07:44:00+00:00 Snow Bunting Rogers, Susan Fox 2022 http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501762246.003.0002 en eng Cornell University Press Learning the Birds page 13-21 ISBN 9781501762246 9781501762253 book-chapter 2022 crcornellup https://doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501762246.003.0002 2024-05-14T12:54:13Z This chapter details the author's experience walking along the mud and rock edges of the Ashokan Reservoir to look for a Snow Bunting. Since the water from the Ashokan Reservoir glides south for over one hundred miles to supply New York City, the reservoir and the land around it are protected. The Department of Environmental Protection permits people to fish, but did not allow exploring the flats for birds. The author then went to East Kingston instead, where she finally saw some buntings. In the past forty years, Snow Bunting populations have dropped by 50 percent. Researchers do not know why, and their work is complicated by the fact that the bird breeds in such remote places. The Snow Bunting breeds in the Arctic then travels south for the winter looking for similar flat, wide-open landscapes. Book Part Arctic Snow Bunting Cornell University Press Arctic The Flats ENVELOPE(-56.948,-56.948,51.467,51.467) 13 21
institution Open Polar
collection Cornell University Press
op_collection_id crcornellup
language English
description This chapter details the author's experience walking along the mud and rock edges of the Ashokan Reservoir to look for a Snow Bunting. Since the water from the Ashokan Reservoir glides south for over one hundred miles to supply New York City, the reservoir and the land around it are protected. The Department of Environmental Protection permits people to fish, but did not allow exploring the flats for birds. The author then went to East Kingston instead, where she finally saw some buntings. In the past forty years, Snow Bunting populations have dropped by 50 percent. Researchers do not know why, and their work is complicated by the fact that the bird breeds in such remote places. The Snow Bunting breeds in the Arctic then travels south for the winter looking for similar flat, wide-open landscapes.
format Book Part
author Rogers, Susan Fox
spellingShingle Rogers, Susan Fox
Snow Bunting
author_facet Rogers, Susan Fox
author_sort Rogers, Susan Fox
title Snow Bunting
title_short Snow Bunting
title_full Snow Bunting
title_fullStr Snow Bunting
title_full_unstemmed Snow Bunting
title_sort snow bunting
publisher Cornell University Press
publishDate 2022
url http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501762246.003.0002
long_lat ENVELOPE(-56.948,-56.948,51.467,51.467)
geographic Arctic
The Flats
geographic_facet Arctic
The Flats
genre Arctic
Snow Bunting
genre_facet Arctic
Snow Bunting
op_source Learning the Birds
page 13-21
ISBN 9781501762246 9781501762253
op_doi https://doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501762246.003.0002
container_start_page 13
op_container_end_page 21
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