iraqbabbler
Well-known member
I'm considering traveling to Peru early in the new year and so I bought myself a copy of the new FG by Stotz et al. Great work needless to say and I'm glad I got it whether I eventually do go or not ..
Get to the point ----------->:smoke: ---> if you open the book at random and look at the species at any one page, there appears to be a high probability that they would have a distribution status of uncommon or worse |8(|
I do recall that on my first visit to Thailand's world-famous Khao Yai, that for many of the species I saw there, that I only saw one or two individual birds of those species .. At that time I saw the glass as half full and counted my blessings that I did at least see that one (or two) individual bird even though I would have loved to have seen more of course ..
So my question is, in the Peruvian context: how rare is rare and is this compounded more by the nature of the dense rainforest habitats there ?
Get to the point ----------->:smoke: ---> if you open the book at random and look at the species at any one page, there appears to be a high probability that they would have a distribution status of uncommon or worse |8(|
I do recall that on my first visit to Thailand's world-famous Khao Yai, that for many of the species I saw there, that I only saw one or two individual birds of those species .. At that time I saw the glass as half full and counted my blessings that I did at least see that one (or two) individual bird even though I would have loved to have seen more of course ..
So my question is, in the Peruvian context: how rare is rare and is this compounded more by the nature of the dense rainforest habitats there ?