Browsing by Autor "Romer S. Miserendino"
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Item type: Item , New information on bird distribution in Bolivia(British Ornithologists' Club, 2025) Miguel Montenegro-Avila; Nicole A. Avalos; J. Luis Martínez; W. Sergio Pantoja; Romer S. Miserendino; Dirk Dekker; Tini Wijpkema; Jacob T. Wijpkema; Carlos A. Villarroel; Alejandro Alfredo Mendoza EspinozaRecent advances in our understanding of the Bolivian avifauna have been substantial; 1,452 species are now known for the country. This manuscript presents a compilation of records made between 2005 and the present, including records for 27 species that contribute to our understanding of elevational and geographic distributions and status of birds in Bolivia. Among the most noteworthy discoveries are further records of the only recently recorded Coscoroba Swan Coscoroba coscoroba, the first record of the globally threatened Horned Curassow Pauxi unicornis in Santa Cruz for more than a decade, evidence that Scaled Dove Columbina squamata might be becoming established in the east of the country, the second record of South American Painted Snipe Nycticryphes semicollaris in Bolivia, the fifth and sixth Bolivian records of Common Tern Sterna hirundo and the third national record of Purple-throated Cotinga Porphyrolaema porphyrolaema. These findings underscore the need for sustained research and documentation of Bolivia's avifauna.Item type: Item , Registros notables del Flamenco Chileno (<i>Phoenicopterus chilensis</i>) en el departamento de Santa Cruz, Bolivia(2023) J. Luis Martínez; Romer S. Miserendino; W. Sergio Pantoja; Nicole A. Avalos; Miguel Montenegro-Ávila; Anahi C. Paca-CondoriIn Bolivia, the Chilean Flamingo, Tokoko or Parina (Phoenicopterus chilensis), is one of the most common and widely distributed flamingos. It is present in the departments of La Paz, Oruro, Potosí, Tarija and Cochabamba. In 2016 and 2022, we found three individuals in Laguna Pirirenda and Laguna Tatarenda, located in the Chaco Serrano ecoregion of the department of Santa Cruz. We found one adult and couple (male and female) in each lagoon, respectively. These are new reports for the species in the department of Santa Cruz and the Chaco Serrano ecoregion; thus, these observations expand this species distribution in the country.