@Cyanocitta The California quail Callipepla californica is an interesting and visually #appealing #bird of the #Galliformes, as visible in this photo. It is originally distributed along the west coast of #NorthAmerica, but also occurs as a #neozoan in South America, Australia or Corsica. These birds are ground-nesting and mostly #grounddwellers, but #roost in trees. B. Andrews et al. (2023) discuss the #invasive history in #Chile and #Argentina.
Stefan F Wirth

reference https://doi.org/10.1186/s40693-023-00115-3

The California Quail (Callipepla californica) in Chile and Argentina: introduction history, current distribution, and biological features - Revista Chilena de Historia Natural

Background Little is known about the California Quail (Callipepla californica) as an invader in Chile and Argentina. Our goal was to review the history of its introduction and to provide updated information on its spread and current geographic distribution in those two neighboring countries, together with information on its body measurements (weight, wing length, and tail length), diet (granivory, frugivory), parasitism (endo and ecto), and other interspecific interactions (competition and predation), including hunting by humans. Methods and result We conducted a selective review of the history of introduction, distributional records, and biological features of C. californica, as recorded in mainstream journals, landmark monographs and books, and internet sources. We also measured specimens collected in central Chile and analyzed their stomach contents. We report that the California Quail was first introduced to Chile in 1864, and it now spans ca. 2,800 km in the country. From stocks in Chile, this bird was back-introduced to California (USA), and also introduced to Argentina in the 1920s, now spanning ca. 1,400 km in the country. It is currently abundant and legally hunted in both countries. In Chile, its non-breeding diet is strongly granivorous. In Argentina it feeds similarly. In Chile, endoparasites are three species of nematodes, one of cestodes, and two of coccidian protozoans; ectoparasites are three species of hard ticks, one of mites, and two of chewing lice. No such data are available from Argentina. In Chile, combining autumn and winter samples we obtained mean weights of 194.4 (± 9.0 SD) g for 21 adult males and of 183.9 (± 14.3 SD) g for 10 adult females, figures similar to those reported for C. c. brunnescens in California (USA), which we suspect is the subspecies now spread over in Chile and Argentina. Discussion We propose that interesting scientific opportunities are being missed regarding the population genetics of a species with introductions and back-introductions that may have left founding effects and genetic bottlenecks in Chile and Argentina, and perhaps some peculiar “Chilean” genetic markers among California (USA) populations. We also raise the question whether this introduced species may be deemed invasive, calling for research to determine its impact in its new environment.

SpringerLink

I don’t know whether to cry or cry.

For all his faults Blair did attempt joined up thinking.
This lot…

https://inews.co.uk/news/visa-crackdown-forces-dwp-benefit-staff-job-coaches-leave-uk-4297830

#chickens
#home
#roost

Visa crackdown forces DWP’s own foreign-born staff to leave the UK

Workers from overseas say they feel betrayed by the ‘shifting goalposts’ pushing them out

The i Paper

In addition to our two flagship open source projects, we maintain a simple list of open source safety tools:

https://github.com/roostorg/awesome-safety-tools

If you're building an online platform or community, you don't have to reinvent everything from scratch; lean on what has come before.

Tell us if you discover a new or interesting tool from this list, or if you think there's something missing!

#OpenSource #TrustAndSafety #ROOST

GitHub - roostorg/awesome-safety-tools: Directory of open source tools for online safety

Directory of open source tools for online safety. Contribute to roostorg/awesome-safety-tools development by creating an account on GitHub.

GitHub

@cassidy
> If Osprey is overkill (it can be for small/early platforms!), we also just open sourced Coop, a more straightforward trust and safety review dashboard with its own automation built

CC @iftas @jaz

#TrustAndSafety #Osprey #Roost #Coop #moderation

crows coming in to roost in berlin

#birds #corvids #crow #crows #roost #urbanwildlife #urbanecology

more chaos at the roost

i'm struggling with slow-shutter-panning shots of many of crows at once – they are a very disorderly bunch

#birds #crows #crow #roost #urbanwildlife

a chaotic moment after dark as crows move between roost locations in downtown berlin

#crows #birds #urbanwildlife #roost

Okay it’s probably obvious/I’m over-thinking it, but I really like that every word in the @roost.tools acronym carries weight.

Here’s what ROOST stands for: (🧵)

#ROOST #TrustAndSafety #OpenSource