SECTIONS
LOG IN
Welcome. This is your 1st of 10 free articles.Sign in or Subscribe. 
OUTDOORS
Posted January 22
INCREASE FONT SIZE
Birding: Annual bird counts include interesting lingerers
Warmer York County especially holds a range of seasonal holdovers in the Christmas Bird Counts.
BY HERB WILSON
Share



 Comment
The 117th Christmas Bird Count is now over. As usual in January, I will discuss the highlights of some of the Maine counts. These standardized censuses provide an important tool to monitor the abundance of winter birds throughout North America and beyond.
I’ll concentrate on changes in regularly wintering birds, the arrival of unpredictable invaders and records of lingering birds whose wintering areas are well to our south. A rarity or two may pop up as well.
We’ll start with the southern Maine coast. The York County count was held on Dec. 21. Thirty observers found 82 species of birds.
Answer:
Land use planning is about more than addressing the physical layout of development, how much it will cost, where it will be located and aesthetics. Land use planning also incorporates environmental impacts such as chemical pollution, noise pollution, flooding due to the loss of trees and plants, etc. In order to meet all these requirements land use planning must draw from a wide array of disciplines' expertise.
Explanation:
mark me brainliest plsssss
<span>B. es
</span>
We use "es" to refer where someone is from.
no because a species is acustom to it is environmnet it is probaly going to dye because it was not raise there or has no idea in what to do