From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #7044 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Saturday, July 31 2021 Volume 14 : Number 7044 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Foreclosure Home Listings ["View Foreclosure Homes" Subject: Foreclosure Home Listings Foreclosure Home Listings http://surveywork.us/stok0z5hWaY6HWK4fdG7FW5ltUfw5SX-EPVrwdWD0RNeWbeK http://surveywork.us/0QD78iBNHCYd2PBkAlwZfdEsNJFN4zQOEmVP4dkg-75SmtAy hite-eyed river martin From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to navigationJump to search White-eyed river martin PseudochelidonSirintarae.svg Conservation status Critically Endangered (IUCN 3.1) Scientific classificationedit Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Chordata Class: Aves Order: Passeriformes Family: Hirundinidae Genus: Pseudochelidon Species: P. sirintarae Binomial name Pseudochelidon sirintarae Thonglongya, 1968 Holotype from Bung Boraphet, Amphoe Mueang, Nakhon Sawan Province, Thailand Pseudochelidon sirintarae map.png Spot shows former wintering location within Thailand; the breeding range is unknown Synonyms Eurochelidon sirintarae (Thonglongya, 1968) The white-eyed river martin (Pseudochelidon sirintarae) is a passerine bird, one of only two members of the river martin subfamily of the swallows. Since it has significant differences from its closest relative, the African river martin, it is sometimes placed in its own genus, Eurochelidon. First found in 1968, it is known only from a single wintering site in Thailand, and may be extinct, since it has not been seen since 1980 despite targeted surveys in Thailand and neighbouring Cambodia. It may possibly still breed in China or Southeast Asia, but a Chinese painting initially thought to depict this species was later reassessed as showing pratincoles. The adult white-eyed river martin is a medium-sized swallow, with mainly glossy greenish-black plumage, a white rump, and a tail which has two elongated slender central tail feathers, each widening to a racket-shape at the tip. It has a white eye ring and a broad, bright greenish-yellow bill. The sexes are similar in appearance, but the juvenile lacks the tail ornaments and is generally browner than the adult. Little is known of the behaviour or breeding habitat of this martin, although like other swallows it feeds on insects caught in flight, and its wide bill suggests that it may take relatively large species. It roosts in reed beds in winter, and may nest in river sandbanks, probably in April or May before the summer rains. It may have been overlooked prior to its discovery because it tended to feed at dawn or dusk rather than during the day. The martin's apparent demise may have been hastened by trapping, loss of habitat and the construction of dams. The winter swallow roosts at the only known location of this martin have greatly reduced in numbers, and birds using river habitats for breeding have declined throughout the region. The white-eyed river martin is one of only two birds endemic to Thailand, and the country's government has noted this through the issues of a stamp and a high-value commem ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 31 Jul 2021 03:08:59 -0400 From: "STUN GUN-FLASHLIGHT" Subject: STUN GUN/FLASHLIGHT KEEPS YOU SAFE FROM DEADLY ATTACKERS! STUN GUN/FLASHLIGHT KEEPS YOU SAFE FROM DEADLY ATTACKERS! http://carbofixx.co/vHh6gdBaukG4ds6yhEiH4ct4JXppG9bepCpmpQ_ITB01WroP http://carbofixx.co/ZiCOarUobjS9Pk_kRQC-Zn1UAWztVk9Rqk-OQNxmyxOzVl8 artin is legally protected under Appendix 1 (the highest category) of the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora (CITES) agreement, and is one of 15 "Reserved Species" in Thailand which, under the provisions of the Wild Animal Reservation and Protection Act, BE 2535, cannot be legally hunted, collected, or kept in captivity under any circumstances. Despite official protection, the martin was captured by locals along with other swallows for sale as food or for release by devout Buddhists, and following its discovery by ornithologists, trappers were reported to have caught as many as 120 individuals and sold them to the director of the Nakhon Sawan Fisheries Station who was unable to keep them alive in captivity. Two birds sent to Bangkok Zoo in 1971 also soon died. The small population may therefore have become non-viable. Bueng Boraphet has been declared a Non-Hunting Area in an effort to protect the species, but surveys to find this martin have been unsuccessful. These include several searches at the main site, a 1969 survey of the Nan, Yom and Wang Rivers of northern Thailand, and a 1996 survey of rivers in northern Laos. A possible sighting was made in Cambodia in 2004, but a 2008 investigation using speedboat surveys and interviews with villagers in Cambodia near the location of the claimed sighting failed to find any positive evidence, and noted that the habitat was in poor condition. Nevertheless, animals as a large as the saola have been rediscovered in Southeast Asia, so it is conceivable that a small population of the martin survives. Despite the lack of records from China, a 2000 field guide covering the region included this species, since it is the mostly likely breeding area outside Thailand, although it is omit ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 31 Jul 2021 03:49:38 -0400 From: "Open Immediately" Subject: Leave your feedback and you could WIN! Leave your feedback and you could WIN! http://carbofixx.co/bqHYsgb1UipC19_YdGJHFaYI4VFMz1JDvRx7DsXlnA30nq6N http://carbofixx.co/2_WoC-vyWi5hG-DJK7pGVQMvAmgyLMgvM4-x_BWK9pA8YOCq ated swallows are monogamous, and pairs of nonmigratory species often stay near their breeding area all year, though the nest site is defended most vigorously during the breeding season. Migratory species often return to the same breeding area each year, and may select the same nest site if they were previously successful in that location. First-year breeders generally select a nesting site close to where they were raised. The breeding of temperate species is seasonal, whereas that of subtropical or tropical species can either be continuous throughout the year or seasonal. Seasonal species in the subtropics or tropics are usually timed to coincide with the peaks in insect activity, which is usually the wet season, but some species, such as the white-bibbed swallow, nest in the dry season to avoid flooding in their riverbank nesting habitat. All swallows defend their nests from egg predators, although solitary species are more aggressive towards predators than colonial species. Overall, the contribution of male swallows towards parental care is the highest of any passerine bird. Parent approaching with food Transferring the food A wire-tailed swallow feeding a recently fledged chick The eggs of swallows tend to be white, although those of some mud-nesters are speckled. The typical clutch size is around four to five eggs in temperate areas and two to three eggs in the tropics. The incubation duties are shared in some species, and in others the eggs are incubated solely by the females. Amongst the species where the males help with incubation, their contribution varies amongst species, with some species such as the cliff swallow sharing the duties equally and the female doing most of the work in others. Amongst the barn swallows, the male of the American subspecies helps (to a small extent), whereas the European subspecies does not. Even in species where the male does not incubate the eggs, he may sit on them when the female is away to reduce heat loss (this is different from incubation as that involves warming the eggs, not just stopping heat loss). Incubation stints last for 5b15 minutes and are followed by bursts of feeding activity. From laying, swallow eggs take 10b21 days to hatch, with 14b18 days being more typic ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #7044 **********************************************