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  • News & article

    Salt, sea and spoonbills

    Life, Pattarawadee Saengmanee, Published on 07/03/2024

    » During a morning stroll through vast salt fields in the seaside town of Samut Sakhon, I couldn't resist but take breathtaking photos of a large flock of birds. Close by, experienced birdwatcher Suchart Daengpayon (also known as Mr Tee) led a small group of foreign tourists on a trip to see the food-seeking behaviours of the spoon-billed sandpiper, an endangered shorebird species.

  • News & article

    Closer to heaven

    Life, Pattarawadee Saengmanee, Published on 01/12/2022

    » Doi Luang Chiang Dao in Chiang Mai is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to discover lush sub-alpine woodland and limestone mountains that rise 2,225m above sea level. As part of Chiang Dao Wildlife Sanctuary, its topography is comparable to that of the Himalayas and south China.

  • News & article

    Urgent reforms needed to protect bird numbers

    News, Published on 28/12/2021

    » Birds are found worldwide, in many different environments, from penguins in Antarctica to pigeons in Trafalgar Square, and from the familiar sparrows on our lawns to the great albatrosses who spend years at sea without ever touching land. There are more than 10,000 species totalling many billions of wild individuals. To this we must add the tens of billions of birds we raise for their meat or eggs, and others we keep as pets.

  • News & article

    Rare world's fattest parrot has record breeding season

    AFP, Published on 18/04/2019

    » WELLINGTON: Said to be the world's fattest parrot, the critically endangered kakapo has enjoyed a record breaking breeding season, New Zealand scientists said on Thursday, with climate change possibly aiding the species' unique mating spree.

  • News & article

    We need to look after creepy-crawlies

    News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 17/02/2019

    » There was a disturbing report this week that the world is running out of insects, primarily due to pesticide poisoning. Having just read an article in which a scientist warned "if insects were to disappear, the world would fall apart", I suspect this is not good news. However, the world already seems to be falling apart without any help from absent insects. Admittedly the declining insect population is difficult to appreciate in Thailand where it is hard to experience a day without an encounter with some kind of bug. In my small garden there are plenty of crawling things creeping about, ready to sneakily bite me at the first opportunity.

  • News & article

    Pets or pests? Quaker parrots invade Madrid

    AFP, Published on 10/10/2016

    » MADRID - They may be cute, colourful and chatty, but South American quaker parrots have taken up residence in Madrid and other Spanish cities, irritating residents with their shrill squawks and destabilising the ecosystem.

  • News & article

    Crocodile 'nanny' brings reptile back from brink in El Salvador

    AFP, Published on 01/07/2015

    » BARRA DE SANTIAGO (EL SALVADOR) - The hungry baby crocodiles wriggle in Jose Antonio Villeda's hand. One by one, he squeezes open their jaws and uses a plastic tube to prod pieces of fish down their gullets.

  • News & article

    It's hard to beat a munchy, crunchy Thai bug

    News, Roger Crutchley, Published on 05/10/2014

    » The most important news of the week is that Thailand is now the world's largest producer of edible insects, with 20,000 insect farms operating in the kingdom. On occasions my bedroom feels like one of the farms, with assorted weird UFOs buzzing around.

  • News & article

    Rare eggs in undies smuggler nobbled

    Published on 17/10/2013

    » GENEVA - Swiss customs authorities said Thursday that they had arrested a bird specialist who smuggled the eggs of protected parrots in his underwear and travelled the globe including Thailand trading in rare species.

  • News & article

    A haven in the clouds

    Life, L. Bruce Kekulé, Published on 27/03/2013

    » Imagine a huge limestone karst massif with vertical cliffs towering up into the clouds and Doi Chiang Dao in the northern province of Chiang Mai comes to mind. This enormous horseshoe-shaped mountain was formed over 200 million years ago during the mid to late Permian era.

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