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Sadie was crossing off the things that were closed and ticking the stuff we'd done, as we went about our day.
Visit blog.qasource.com... to get the best 7 things checklist your software testing company expects from you. Each will help foster the ideal conditions for effective software development and testing.
Ten Key Tips For Every Ramadan Checklist Read article at ift.tt/3a75vVR Ramadan which is the 9th month of the Islamic lunar calendar holds a very special place in the heart of every practicing Muslim. This is evidenced by the fact that the countdown to Ramadan begins a month or two prior to its arrival. In the same vein Muslims, especially children and teenagers are eager to prepare a Ramadan checklist. This article incorporates ten key tips for every Ramadan checklist. These tips can help Muslims organize themselves better during the blessed month. They consist of the following: • Fearing Allah’s displeasure in all we say or do • Treating Ramadan as a training period to reform ourselves • Bearing in mind the importance of being charitable in Ramadan • Eating moderately to avoid overeating and becoming lazy in worship • Fulfilling the rights of others solely for the sake of Allah SWT • Working for the unity of the Muslim Ummah during this blessed month • The unique tips found within this article are not the stereotype ones and can actually be life-changing if adhered to in shaa Allah. Ramadan Mubarak in advance! youtu.be/_YVIuw3sysk
We are sharing with you event planning checklist that u need to keep when you are event planning. There are very minor things which are relatively important but are easily missed out.
A careful examination and research required when hiring event furniture as its vital for the success of the event.
Event Checklist
How many people can be accomodated in the hall? It will aid in deciding the number of guests to be invited.
Adequate parking facility available or not for the event venue.
Check emergency exits
Disability access for delegates. Wheelchair ramps?
Check screening so its visible to all the guest.
Decide room decor
Comfort in the hall ( Adjust heating or cooling as per weather requirement)
Screen size on stage should be big enough so everyone can see clearly.
LCD Projector needed?
Corporate colour scheme. Its important for overall event theme.
Requirements for event furniture for event hire. What is all needed in corporate events?
Plants, flowers, furniture, props? Other event accessories
Check for event lighting.
How many micophones needed?
Arrangement of speakers?
Health and Safety Checks should be done beforehand.
Areas of risks should be looked after.
Fire Aid should be available
Finall rehersals should be done.
Visit our website for more information on hiring event furniture and bespoke event furniture services.
Portugal 28-04-2022
ebird.org/checklist/S108265609
[order] Falconiformes | [family] Accipitridae | [latin] Elanus caeruleus | [UK] Black-winged Kite | [FR] Élanion blanc | [DE] Gleitaar | [ES] Elanio Común | [IT] Nibbio bianco | [NL] Grijze Wouw
spanwidth min.: 71 cm
spanwidth max.: 85 cm
size min.: 31 cm
size max.: 36 cm
Breeding
incubation min.: 25 days
incubation max.: 28 days
fledging min.: 30 days
fledging max.: 35 days
broods 1
eggs min.: 2
eggs max.: 4
Physical characteristics
Much smaller than other kites; similar in length to Kestrel but stouter. Owl-faced, large-headed raptor, with mostly pale plumage and comparatively broad wings. It recalls small, short-tailed male harrier rather than kite. In adult, contrast of black shoulders and underside of primaries with otherwise grey or white plumage unique in west Palearctic raptors. Juvenile has buff foreparts and dark brown mantle, with feathers there and over forewing obviously fringed pale brown or white.
Habitat
This is a bird of open country wherever it occurs, but it can be seen in all habitat types from moderately dense savannah to open semi-desert, or even deserts, at altitudes from 0-9,000 feet. It roosts in trees and is on the wing early in the morning. Having taken to the wing, it spends most of each day perched on a series of perches, which may be telegraph posts or wires, dead tree stumps, or sometimes rocks where trees are scarce. When not perched it flies at a height of 50-200 feet over the grasslands, hovering at intervals, and circling into the wind in the manner of a kestrel. Its mode of maintaining position during a hover is unlike that of a kestrel, however. When flying from place to place it flies directly, with measured beats of its rather pointed wings, much slower than those of small falcons. When perched it often raises and lowers the tail; this action is probably a form of display.
Other details
Elanus caeruleus is resident in Iberia and south-west France, with Europe accounting for a tiny proportion of its global range. Its European breeding population is very small (as few as 810 pairs), but increased substantially between 1970-1990, and continued to increase-albeit at a slower rate-during 1990-2000. Nevertheless, its population size still renders it susceptible to the risks affecting small populations.
This species has a fragmented distribution covering most of Africa except the Sahara, south-eastern Asia, parts of Indonesia and Australia. In south-western Europe it inhabits open habitats with scattered trees. For a long time it was restricted to the Iberian Peninsula, but during the last two decades it has extended its distribution to south-western France. About 1300 breeding pairs occur currently in the European Union
Feeding
The mainstay of the Black-shouldered Kite's diet is mammals up to the size of a small rat. There are taken in grasslands. A few small ground birds such as larks and pipits, and large insects, especially grasshoppers and locusts also feature on occasions. On the Arabian coast the staple diet is dead fish and offal, varied with lizards, no doubt because of shortage of other food. Most food is taken on the ground, but some insects are caught in the air.
Conservation
This species has a large range, with an estimated global Extent of Occurrence of 10,000,000 km2. It has a large global population estimated to be 1,000,000-10,000,000 individuals (Ferguson-Lees et al. 2001). Global population trends have not been quantified, but populations appear to be stable (Ferguson-Lees et al. 2001) so the species is not believed to approach the thresholds for the population decline criterion of the IUCN Red List (i.e. declining more than 30% in ten years or three generations). For these reasons, the species is evaluated as Least Concern. [conservation status from birdlife.org]
Breeding
The nest is built by the birds themselves, and a new one is built every year, though the same area, or even the same tree may be used. It is a small, light structure of thin twigs, flat and loosely made, not more than twelve inches across by three inches deep. It could be at any height from five to 60 feet above ground, and is usually in a large tree standing in open ground, often a thorny one. In South Africa they seem to prefer the tops of fir trees, and when there are no trees available, like in the desert islands of the Arabian Coast, they will breed on rock ledges. Both sexes build, breaking off twigs from trees and bringing them to the site in the beak. The male brings most of the material which is then worked into the nest by the female. Three to five eggs are laid at intervals of two to three days. In temperate regions the eggs are laid in spring, but in tropical regions the breeding season is elastic and may even extend into wet periods.
The female carries out most, if not all of the incubation. She is fed on or near the nest by the male during the incubation period. Both birds are likely to be aggressive if the nest is disturbed during this period, and they vigorously attack other raptors and crows passing near by. The incubation period is about 26 days (25-28). The eggs hatch at two to three day intervals, so a brood of four will take a week or more to hatch;. Although this results in wide variation in the size of the chicks, the older chicks are not usually aggressive to the younger, and all are sometimes reared. This is one of the rare predators with a possible second brood.
The feathers appear through the down at about twelve to fourteen days, and the young are fully feathered by 21 days. They are ready to fly at 30 to 35 days. In exceptional conditions on the Arabian Coast the fledging period exceeds 40 days, probably due to lack of food. The young return to the nest at intervals after their first flight, and are fed by their parents away from the nest. ln the early fledging period the male brings all the prey and the female remains at or on the nest, tending the young. Later the female takes the major part in killing for the brood, but the male remains for long periods near the nest and takes some share. The female alone feeds the young, the male only bringing prey to the nest. She continues to feed them until they are feathered, at about twenty days, but thereafter drops prey on the nest and leaves them to tear it up. With a large brood, of three or four, she feeds all the young and does not favour the largest.
Migration
Mainly resident, at least in west Palearctic, but in tropics subject to erratic movements which may occasionally be on large scale in search of conditions supporting abundant prey. Evidence from India of periodic fluctuations, possibly eruptive, numbers sometimes appearing in areas where previously scarce or absent, then virtually disappearing again after a year or two. In tropical Africa, seasonal movements reported in west, but in East Africa somewhat nomadic, numbers in any one area fluctuating according to relative abundance of rodent and insect prey, often travels long distances, and even crosses equator.
Desenho feito a mão / Ilustrator
Ilustração para o manual de segurança no trabalho, máquina de sabonete.
Algarve Portugal 29-04-2022
ebird.org/checklist/S108376485
Scientific classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum:Chordata
Class:Aves
Order:Coraciiformes
Family:Meropidae
Genus:Merops
Species:M. apiaster
Binomial name
Merops apiaster
[order] Coraciiformes | [family] Meropidae | [latin] Merops apiaster | [UK] Bee-Eater | [FR] Guêpier d'Europe | [DE] Bienenfresser | [ES] Abejaruco Común | [IT] Gruccione europeo | [NL] Bijeneter
spanwidth min.: 36 cm
spanwidth max.: 40 cm
size min.: 25 cm
size max.: 29 cm
Breeding
incubation min.: 19 days
incubation max.: 21 days
fledging min.: 25 days
fledging max.: 31 days
broods 1
eggs min.: 5
eggs max.: 7
Physical characteristics
Highly distinctive with multicolored plumage. Male has black gorget, greenish-blue underparts, scapulars and rump flaxen. Long uppertail coverts the same green as tail, latter with streamers. Primaries and their coverts and tertials green to green-blue, but rest of upperwing mahogany. Iris red-crimson, mouth flesh-pink. Female tends to have scapulars and lower back greener, lees flaxen, than male, lesser wing coverts less intensely green.
Habitat
Sunny hillsides, meadows, pasture and cultivated land with shelter-belts and scattered trees, plains, dissected steppe, broad river valleys, shrubby riverbanks in semi desert, and practically any open and well-timbered country, and Mediterranean macchia scrub.
Other details
Merops apiaster is a widespread summer visitor to southern and eastern Europe, which accounts for less than half of its global breeding range. Its European breeding population is large (>480,000 pairs), but underwent a moderate decline between 1970- 1990. Although the species increased overall during 1990-2000—with increasing or stable trends across most of its European range—its population probably has not yet recovered to the level that preceded its decline.
Feeding
Diet relies largely on bumblebees and honeybees, mainly in Europe, wasps of many families and stingless bees in Africa, but takes most other orders of insects as opportune. In fact, probably eats all day-flying insects. Nestling are fed larger insects than those consumed by adults, particularly if latter are foraging more than a few hundred meters from nest. Forages from vantage point on tree, fence or telephone wire, making lengthy forays after a passing insect, seizing it after short dashing chase, and bringing it back to the perch to beat its head, killing the prey.
Conservation
This species has a large range, with an estimated global Extent of Occurrence of 1,000,000-10,000,000 km². It has a large global population, including an estimated 950,000-2,000,000 individuals in Europe (BirdLife International in prep.). Global population trends have not been quantified, but the species is not believed to approach the thresholds for the population decline criterion of the IUCN Red List (i.e. declining more than 30% in ten years or three generations). For these reasons, the species is evaluated as Least Concern. [conservation status from birdlife.org]
Breeding
The European Bee-eater is a colonially breeding migratory species. The birds arrive in the breeding colony in early May and have departed again by the end of August. The interval from the first egg being laid until the start of hatching (which is highly asynchronous, is about 28 days, and from hatching to the completion of fledging about 32 days. Clutches consist of 4-7 eggs laid at 2 day intervals in a nest burrow. The nest chamber is at the end of a tunnel a meter or more in length, built in a sand or earth bank or in level ground. Some nest burrows are re-used in consecutive years, but the majority of pairs excavate burrow anew each year. About a fifth of the nests with chicks have helpers. The majority of these have a single helper, some have two helpers, and occasionally nests may have three or four helpers. Helpers contribute to provisioning the brood, but unlike in White-fronted Bee-eaters, they do not help with incubation. They may start helping at any stage during the nestling period, and continue to provision chicks after they have fledged.
Migration
Migratory; exclusively a summer visitor to breeding range. Winters almost entirely within Africa in 2 distinct segments: West Africa and Sénégal to Ghana, marginally to Nigeria, and eastern and southern Africa, mainly south of Equator and Congo basin forests. Passages broad-front overland, with unbroken overflying of Sahara and Arabian deserts. Migrant flocks favour thermal conditions; hence some tendency to concentrate at narrows for Mediterranean crossing: Straits of Gibraltar, Sicilian Channel, and Cyprus/Levant. Sicilian Channel passage much more pronounced in spring, in line with more conspicuous spring (than autumn) passage through North Africa generally. Family parties begin congregating in second half of July, and main exodus from Europe spans mid-August to early October. Present in African winter quarters from mid-September (early October in South Africa); return movement begins March in south, continuing through April; European spring passage mid-April to late May. Spring migrants often overshoot in anticyclonic weather, regularly reaching north-west Europe and exceptionally nesting.
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Make wedding planning stress-free with our customisable wedding checklist. Set reminders, write notes and get recommendations on the go…
Edu. Parent #CyberSafety Checklist (PCSC) - Free PDF Download - Authored by Michael Nuccitelli, Psy.D. #iPredator NYC #ChildSafety #BeBest #IoT - SSL Safe Link: www.ipredator.co/parent-cyber-safety-checklist
A screenshot of how to connect with people so you can add them as a collaborator on a grocery list checklist in Lizts.
The question may arise in your mind as to how to choose between the right SAP consulting service provider? Here is the checklist that helps you to select the right SAP implementation partner.
eBird Checklist: ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S29297424
En-Us: Glaucous Gull Ca: Gavinot hiperbori Da: Gråmåge De: Eismöwe Es: Gavión hiperbóreo Fi: isolokki Fr: Goéland bourgmestre It: Gabbiano glauco Nl: Grote Burgemeester No: Polarmåke Pt: Gaivota-hiperbórea Sv: Vittrut Ru: Бургомистр