[47849] in linux-announce channel archive
Join the SiriusXM Loyalty Program
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (SiriusXM Membership)
Wed Mar 12 08:55:14 2025
Date: Wed, 12 Mar 2025 07:54:34 -0500
From: "SiriusXM Membership" <SiriusXMRenewal@truthfinder.ru.com>
Reply-To: "SiriusXM Limited Offer" <YourSiriusXMLoyalty@truthfinder.ru.com>
To: <linuxch-announce.discuss@charon.mit.edu>
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Join the SiriusXM Loyalty Program
http://truthfinder.ru.com/v1uPnBVTCaD4MFh8gnJHJr-pYCRy8AEz373W42Gj5-au5MIlHg
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ned how to breed falcons in captivity and had bred American Kestrels and felt that similar approaches could be used to breed Mauritius Kestrels, and then to release the birds to the wild to bolster the population. Working with international conservation organisations (World Wildlife Fund and the International Council for Bird Preservation) and with the Mauritius Forestry Department a conservation project was hatched for the Mauritius Kestrel in 1973. The initial work was done by one of Cade’s students, Stanley Temple, who studied them in the wild and started the captive breeding project.
The recorded population subsequently dropped to an all-time low of only four individuals in the wild in 1974, and it was considered the rarest bird in the world. Stanley Temple from Cornell University studied this species for two years and the first attempt in 1973 to breed the birds in captivity failed because the hatchling died when the incubator had a breakdown. Though conservation measures were immediately undertaken with the help of a breeding program by the Jersey Zoo (now Durrell Wildlife Park), the efforts to rescue this species initially failed because the eggs were not fertile.
In 1979, a new attempt was undertaken. With the help of Gerald Durrell, the Welsh biologist Carl Jones established a wildlife sanctuary on Île aux Aigrettes. He climbed on the trees and removed the eggs from the nests. This time the eggs were fertile, and Jones was able to rear the hatchlings in incub
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<div style="color:#F3F3F3;font-size:8px;">ned how to breed falcons in captivity and had bred American Kestrels and felt that similar approaches could be used to breed Mauritius Kestrels, and then to release the birds to the wild to bolster the population. Working with international conservation organisations (World Wildlife Fund and the International Council for Bird Preservation) and with the Mauritius Forestry Department a conservation project was hatched for the Mauritius Kestrel in 1973. The initial work was done by one of Cade’s students, Stanley Temple, who studied them in the wild and started the captive breeding project. The recorded population subsequently dropped to an all-time low of only four individuals in the wild in 1974, and it was considered the rarest bird in the world. Stanley Temple from Cornell University studied this species for two years and the first attempt in 1973 to breed the birds in captivity failed because the hatchling died when the incubator had a breakdown. Though conservation measures were immediately undertaken with the help of a breeding program by the Jersey Zoo (now Durrell Wildlife Park), the efforts to rescue this species initially failed because the eggs were not fertile. In 1979, a new attempt was undertaken. With the help of Gerald Durrell, the Welsh biologist Carl Jones established a wildlife sanctuary on Île aux Aigrettes. He climbed on the trees and removed the eggs from the nests. This time the eggs were fertile, and Jones was able to rear the hatchlings in incub</div>
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