Monthly Archives: April 2006

France: Record Consumption Of Foie Gras

Last year, the French consumed a record amount of foie gras, despite concerns around bird flu. Goose liver consumption was up 2.7% from 2004 to 2005.

The French parliament declared goose liver products to be part of the cultural heritage of France, and thus were given special, protected status. This occurred at a time when more countries across the globe are taking steps towards eliminating foie gras production.

Related story: The Trouble With Foie Gras

Source: Fransen eten recordhoeveelheid ganzenlever

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First Godwit Eggs Found In Holland

The first Dutch Black-Tailed Godwit eggs of the season were found on last Sunday by 12-year-old Tom Kuijpers in Schipluiden, South Holland. In the following days more early eggs were discovered by volunteers.

More than half of the world Black-Tailed Godwit population breeds in the Netherlands. The typical Dutch landscape – meadows, grazing cows and clean water – are an ideal breeding area for the Godwits. The birds breed in open grassland with a plentiful food supply.

Each spring, volunteers search Dutch pastures and fields for Godwit nests. The nests are marked so that farmers will not disturb the area and the birds have the best opportunity to raise their chicks.

The organization Land van Wijk & Wouden has promoted the cause of the Godwit in the area between Zoetermeer, Leiden and Alphen aan den Rijn. Because of their measures, the Godwit population in this area has stabilized, while in the rest of the Netherlands the population has fallen dramatically.

Source: Eerste Grutto-eieren

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Dutch Group Urges Against Flu-Related Bird Abuse

The Dutch bird protection agency Vogelbescherming has urged Dutch citizens to leave birds in peace during the spring breeding season. In France and Belgium citizens are removing nests of birds such as swallows from their barns and homes amid fears of the H5N1 bird flu virus. Vogelbescherming emphasizes that such actions are totally unnecessary because swallows are not in the risk group of birds thus far affected by the virus. According to the group, there is no reason to fear these birds.

Swallows are on the Dutch list of threatened birds, and any unnatural disturbance of their nests during breeding season could prove fatal for the species in the Netherlands. Swallows will be returning to the Netherlands in the coming weeks from their winter homes in Africa. Swallows are very beneficial to humans because they are huge consumers of flies and mosquitoes.

Last week Vogelbescherming spoke out against potential mishandling of stork nests due to bird flu fears. Like swallows, storks do not play a role in the spread of H5N1 so far and thus should not be disturbed.

Source: Vogelbescherming: hetze tegen zwaluw voorkomen

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Researchers: Free-Range Chicken Not Better Off

Free-range chickens which have been penned due to recent regulations in the Netherlands to prevent the spread of bird flu are not worse off from being kept indoors. This is according to research conducted by the Animal Science Group in Lelystad.

During an earlier period of mandatory cooping last fall, the researchers tested chickens for the Dutch Ministry of Agriculture. They discovered that the mandatory penning of free-range chickens did not damage the well-being of the animals significantly.

Source: Onderzoek: opgehokte kip niet veel slechter af

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Netherlands: Ancient Sea Bird Fossils Discovered

In the Dutch province of Noord-Brabant a large collection of bird fossils has been found. The cache contained over 200 bones and fragments. It is the largest such grouping of bird fossils to be found in Europe.

The fossils were found in a layer of the earth believed to be of marine origin, which is reflected in the types of fossils found. Albatrosses, shearwaters, geese and ducks were the main bird species found. Some of the species were previously unknown to science. The fossils were used to compare with other, similar fossils in existence in North America and other parts of Europe.

The types of bird fossils discovered indicates a much warmer climate than today’s Noord-Brabant.

The fossils have been studied for over a year, in cooperation with both amateurs and researchers from several Dutch museums, including Naturalis in Leiden, Oertijdmuseum De Groene Poort in Boxtel and the Institute for Archaeology from the University of Groningen. The fossils were compared with bones from the east coast of the United States from the collection of the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D.C. It was the first time that fossils of birds from the Miocene and Pliocene periods from both sides of the Atlantic Ocean were compared.

The total number of sea bird species in the Pliocene period is much larger than what is now found in the Atlantic Ocean region.

A portion of the fossils are on display at the Oertijdmuseum in Boxtel, along with other exhibits demonstrating the changes to the climate of the Netherlands over the eons.

Source: Oeroude zeevogels ontdekt in Noord-Brabant

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