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Birding
Bird Identification Q&A
Green Imperial, Pied Imperial and unknown Pigeon Indonesia
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<blockquote data-quote="Ding Li" data-source="post: 1423696" data-attributes="member: 14932"><p>Personally, i find it very hard to base a species distribution, let alone an enigmatic species on a handful of historical localities and even so, mostly which are hardly sampled. Almost every southeast asian island that i ever worked or birded on had a few species added to the list each time it was surveyed, So i would think that the likelihood of occurence of silvery on any of the Mentawai-Banyak group of islands to be extremely high, even if it has not been recorded there in the past. </p><p></p><p>Ding Li</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ding Li, post: 1423696, member: 14932"] Personally, i find it very hard to base a species distribution, let alone an enigmatic species on a handful of historical localities and even so, mostly which are hardly sampled. Almost every southeast asian island that i ever worked or birded on had a few species added to the list each time it was surveyed, So i would think that the likelihood of occurence of silvery on any of the Mentawai-Banyak group of islands to be extremely high, even if it has not been recorded there in the past. Ding Li [/QUOTE]
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Birding
Bird Identification Q&A
Green Imperial, Pied Imperial and unknown Pigeon Indonesia
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