Hi Aurélien!
I want to get in touch with you as soon as possible. Can't reach you by email of some reason.
You can email me at roadrunner@club300.se
My question regards pictures to a frontcover of our magazine Roadrunner.
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Dear Aurélien Audevard. Nice picture! However, the bird looks to me more like a red-throated thrush because of the red breast that forms a sharp border to the belly. Also the bird doesn´t show any arrow-shaped orange feathers along the flanks and belly. Actually the belly and flanks looks rather perfectly for red-throated thrush in my eyes.
I could be wrong but do you or others have any comments?
Best wishes
Henrik Haaning Nielsen
To me it Looks like a nice first winter male
Redthraoted Thrush (Turdus Ruficollis).
Distinct border betwenn Redish throat and belly and only thin dark streaking on the flanks. Naumanni mostly show scaly reddish markings on flanks and no distinct border on breast.
Jan Hjort Christensen
Hej, Aurélien går vist ikke selv ind og checker fotokommentarer. Derfor er det bedre at rette henvendelse direkte - hans mailadr står på foto- , hvis han skal sige god for en rettelse. Skal fotografer egentlig give grønt lys før titlen kan ændres?
mvh mkh
Oh, rest my case. I just wrote that I wasn't sure if you would see the comments, that it would probably be better to contact you by email.But I think I will retire in silence.
best regards
Morten
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Dear Aurelien and others!
The very pale sides to the tail may be bewildering, as orientalis - the ssp. occuring in East Asia, are shown in e.g. the Collins Guide - with darker gery sides to the tail.
From studies of many birds in South korea recently i can confirm, that the sides of the tail in orientalis here (as well as in East China and Japan) are paler that shown in the Collins guide. Often, they could be judges as off-white, but never the poor white of meena and Turtle Dove. Clearly, the differences between orientalis and meena are smaller than generally believed.
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