It was a truly monumental moment for Chris Filardi, director of Pacific Programs at the American Museum of Natural History in New York. He was finally holding the elusive Guadalcanal moustached kingfisher! He said it was like finding a unicorn.
Image, he had been searching for the rare and mysterious orange, white, and brilliant-blue bird for more than 20 years. Then, on a field study in the high forests of Guadalcanal in the Solomon Islands, he finally heard the “ko-ko-ko-ko-kiew” sound of what he described as the unmistakable call of a large kingfisher. Find out what he did next with this amazing natural world discovery on the next page:
It was probably delicious,….
The scientists of this world ! Have done damage with all their sinister blather !!! Disgusting !
Idiot.
Why not put a camera on it and study flight patterns,eating habits, and see if there’s more out there? Study it’s body when it dies naturally!!!!
Not a bad idea, but when they started marking birds with little bands for science it screwed over a bunch of birds bc the females wouldn’t mate with males marked with certain colors. Birds are a finicky bunch.
https://www.facebook.com/ron.alvarez.18/posts/897364887020163
Idiot
Idiots
Must be part of the EPA
Where are all the cecil lion lovers?