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Figure 19. Distribution and migration of the Bobolink. In crossing to South America, most of the Bobolinks use route 3 (Fig. 18), showing no hesitation in making the flight from Jamaica across an islandless stretch of ocean.
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www.npwrc.usgs.gov/resource/birds/migratio/routes.htm
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Bobolink; Bobolinks have one of the longest migration routes in the western hemisphere. ... Migration Route and Stopover Sites; Bobolinks nest in hayfields and meadows across the northern United States and southern Canada. They spend their winters in South America, primarily in southwestern Brazil,
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www.nwf.org/birdsandglobalwarming/birdprofile.cfm?bird=...
www.nwf.org/birdsandglobalwarming/birdprofile.cfm?bird=Bobolink
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You can learn more about the Bobolink’s migration in Miyoko Chu’s book, Songbird Journeys. Sign up for our podcast and get BirdNote any time you want. Click here. ... Sign up for Weekly Preview...
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www.birdnote.org/birdnote.cfm?id=1466
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Song of the Bobolink provided by The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York. Recorded by A.A. Allen. Ambient audio recorded by D.S. Herr. Producer: John Kessler; Executive Producer: Chris Peterson; ... Bobolink Migration Transcript-1466...
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www.birdnote.org/birdnote-transcript.cfm?id=1486
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Migration Info The Bobolink migration is one of the most spectacular for any land bird; an individual from the northern portion of the breeding range can fly a 20,000-mile round-trip each year between the Canadian prairie and the grasslands of Argentina.
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www.enature.com/fieldguides/detail_migration.asp?recnum...
www.enature.com/fieldguides/detail_migration.asp?recnum=BD0328&viewType=migration
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bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/176/articles/migratio...
bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/176/articles/migration
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Frederick C. Lincoln's classic work on the "Migration of Birds" first appeared in 1935. It was revised in 1950 and has been out of print for several years, after selling over 140,000 copies. ... Figure 19 - Distribution and migration of the bobolink.
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members.tripod.com/sirorfeo/idtraining/migratio.htm
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Habitat use during Migration: Unknown. ... It’s not clear if stopover habitat along the migration route limits Bobolink populations today. ... Bobolink conservation requires restoration and management of large grassland landscapes. Restorations should seek to create patch sizes greater than 10-30 hectares with little woody edge.
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www.wisconsinbirds.org/Plan/species/bobo.htm
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2007). These trends are undoubtedly due in part to changes in land use on the breeding grounds, but we do not know how factors during the rest of the life cycle may be limiting Bobolink populations.
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www.vtecostudies.org/bobo/
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