View allAll Photos Tagged unga

12 September 2022, Rome, Italy - UNGA Side Event: “The Road to UNGA Preventing Famine and Fighting Food Insecurity”. Omar Castañeda Solares, Deputy Permanent Representative of Guatemala to the United Nations.

 

Photo credit must be given: ©FAO. Editorial use only. Copyright ©FAO.

18 September 2017, NYC - UNGA - "The business case for a better world - How companies promote peace, justice and Inclusion". Offices of White & Case. © UNDP / Freya Morales

18 September 2017, NYC - UNGA - "The business case for a better world - How companies promote peace, justice and Inclusion". Offices of White & Case. © UNDP / Freya Morales

Réunion des Champions du Groupe de réponse à la crise mondiale sur l’alimentation, l’énergie et les finances organisée par le SG/ONU

Le Président de la République est l’un des six champions du Groupe.

Photo : Lionel Mandeix / Présidence

Unga Bunga Tablet.

Another meme I made. Well I added to it. Though I guess that is what memes are about anyway. Taking something and changing it.

Karin Kneissl trifft sich mit dem Außenminister Palästinas, Riad al-Malki bei einem bilateralen Gespräch im Rahmen der UNO-Generalversammlung

Foto’s ©️Ministerie van Buitenlandse Zaken - Algemene Vergadering van de Verenigde Naties in New York, September 2024 - Programma Koninkrijk der Nederlanden - #MinBZ - United Nations General Assembly 2024, program Kingdom of the Netherlands.

September 18 2017 - New York, New York - US - European Union Commissioner for Migration, Home Affairs and Citizenship, Dimitris Avramopouls, speaking on a panel for the role and responsibilities of private actors in strengthening the stability and international security of cyberspace at the United Nations. He is joined by representatives of the Carnegie Endowment( on his right ), the FM of France, Jean-Yves Le Drian, ( on his left )and the representative from Microsoft on the right end of the photo.

New York, 20 September 2017 - Mr. Achim Steiner attends UNGA high-level side event "The EU External Investment Plan (EIP) - Mobilizing EUR 44 billion for the Global Goals". The European Commission jointly with the UNDP will be organising a side event on the European External Investment Plan (EIP) and its role in reaching the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The EIP and its European Fund for Sustainable Development (EFSD) provide a coherent approach to address development challenges, with the main objective of leveraging additional private investments, improving business environments and creating decent jobs. The Administrator is a keynote speaker. © UNDP / Freya Morales

Ur min pappas bildarkiv. / Two Young Women. From my father's photo archive.

Minister of CLimate and the Environment Vidar Helgesen enjoying New York City in between meetings.

 

Photo: KLD/Tone Hertzberg.

15 September 2020, Rome, Italy - FAO Director-General QU Dongyu. Virtual Side event at 75th Session of the UN General Assembly “Food Crises and COVID-19: Emerging evidence and implications for action”, Global Network Against Food Crises.

 

Photo credit: ©FAO/Giulio Napolitano. Editorial use only. Copyright ©FAO.

New York, 20 September 2017 - Mr. Achim Steiner attends UNGA high-level side event "The EU External Investment Plan (EIP) - Mobilizing EUR 44 billion for the Global Goals". The European Commission jointly with the UNDP will be organising a side event on the European External Investment Plan (EIP) and its role in reaching the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The EIP and its European Fund for Sustainable Development (EFSD) provide a coherent approach to address development challenges, with the main objective of leveraging additional private investments, improving business environments and creating decent jobs. The Administrator is a keynote speaker. © UNDP / Freya Morales

18 September 2017, NYC - UNGA - "The business case for a better world - How companies promote peace, justice and Inclusion". Mr. Mosaad Mohamed Ali, Exec. Director, African Centre for Justice & Peace Studies. © UNDP / Freya Morales

Bloomberg New Economy Editorial Director Erik Schatzker sits down for a conversation with Professor Joseph Stiglitz on the economic implications of the US election and more this UNGA week.

2019-09-24: President of the African Development Bank Group, Dr. Akinwumi A. Adesina with Luis Alberto Moreno, Colombian Businessman & Former Diplomat and Gerard Baker, Editor-in-Chief of Wall Street Journal at UNGA 74 - 2019 Concordia Annual Summit.

Deputy Secretary Kurt Campbell meets with Malaysian Foreign Minister Mohamad Hasan in New York City, New York, September 23, 2024. (Official State Department photo by Freddie Everett)

Karin Kneissl trifft sich mit dem Außenminister Palästinas, Riad al-Malki bei einem bilateralen Gespräch im Rahmen der UNO-Generalversammlung

18 September 2017, NYC - UNGA - Mr. Achim Steiner, UNDP Adiministrator, delivers a video message during the meeting. "The business case for a better world - How companies promote peace, justice and Inclusion". Offices of White & Case. © UNDP / Freya Morales

Norway's Foreign Minister Børge Brende meets UN's Secretary-General António Guterres.

 

Photo: UN Photo/Rick Bajornas.

She has two eggs, but seems only one chicken, last year she had two.

 

Red-throated Diver nesting in Porkeri Mountains

  

Adult in breeding plumage

Conservation status

 

Least Concern (IUCN 3.1)[1]

Scientific classification

Kingdom: Animalia

 

Phylum: Chordata

 

Class: Aves

 

Order: Gaviiformes

 

Family: Gaviidae

 

Genus: Gavia

 

Species: G. stellata

  

Binomial name

Gavia stellata

(Pontoppidan, 1763)

Synonyms

Colymbus stellatus Pontoppidan, 1763 Colymbus lumme Brünnich, 1764

Colymbus septentrionalis Linnaeus, 1766

Gavia lumme Forster, 1788

Colymbus mulleri Brehm, 1826

Urinator lumme Stejneger, 1882

  

The Red-throated Diver (Gavia stellata), known in North America as the Red-throated Loon, is a migratory aquatic bird that is found in the temperate regions of the northern hemisphere. It is the smallest and most widely distributed member of the loon or diver family.

 

Around 55–67 centimetres (22–26 in) in length, the Red-throated Diver is a nondescript bird in winter, greyish above fading to white below. During the breeding season, it acquires the distinctive reddish throat which gives rise to its common name. Fish form the bulk of the diet, with invertebrates and plants sometimes eaten as well. A monogamous species, the Red-throated Diver forms long-term pair bonds.

 

Contents [hide]

1 Taxonomy and etymology

2 Description

2.1 Voice

3 Habitat and distribution

4 Behaviour

4.1 Food and feeding

4.2 Breeding

5 Conservation status and threats

6 In human culture

7 References

7.1 Sources

8 External links

  

[edit] Taxonomy and etymology

First described by Danish naturalist Erik Pontoppidan in 1763, the Red-throated Diver is a monotypic species, with no distinctive subspecies despite its large Holarctic range.[2] Pontoppidan initially placed the species in the now-defunct genus Colymbus, which contained grebes as well as divers. By 1788, however, German naturalist Johann Reinhold Forster realized that grebes and divers were different enough to warrant separate genera, and moved the Red-throated Diver (along with all other diver species) to its present genus.[3] Its relationship to the four other divers is complex; though all belong to the same genus, it differs more than any of the others in terms of morphology, behaviour, ecology and breeding biology. It is thought to have evolved in the Palearctic, and then to have expanded into the Nearctic.[2]

 

The genus name Gavia comes from the Latin for "sea mew", as used by ancient Roman naturalist Pliny the Elder.[4] The specific epithet stellata is Latin for "set with stars" or "starry",[5] and refers to the bird's speckled back in its non-breeding plumage.[4] "Diver" refers to the family's underwater method of hunting for prey, while "red-throated" is a straightforward reference to the bird's most distinctive breeding plumage feature. The word "loon" is thought to have derived from the Swedish lom, the Old Norse or Icelandic lómr, or the Old Dutch loen, all of which mean "lame" or "clumsy", and is a probable reference to the difficulty that all divers have in moving about on land.[6]

  

[edit] Description

The Red-throated Diver is the smallest and lightest of the world's diver species, ranging from 55–67 centimetres (22–26 in) in length with a 91–110 centimetres (36–43 in) wingspan,[7] and averaging 1.4 kilograms (3.1 lb) in weight.[8] Like all divers, it is long-bodied and short-necked, with its legs set far back on its body.[9] The sexes are similar, although males tend to be slightly larger and heavier than females.[2] In breeding plumage, the adult has a grey head and neck (with narrow black and white stripes on the back of the neck), a triangular red throat patch, white underparts and a dark mantle. It is the only diver with an all-dark back in breeding plumage. The non-breeding plumage is drabber with the chin, foreneck and much of the face white, and considerable white speckling on the dark mantle. Its bill is thin, straight and sharp, and the bird often holds it at an uptilted angle. Though the colour of the bill changes from black in summer to pale grey in winter, the timing of the colour change does not necessarily correspond to that of the bird's overall plumage change. The nostrils are narrow slits located near the base of the bill, and the iris is reddish.

  

An adult in non-breeding plumage shows the speckled back which gives the bird its specific name.When it first emerges from its egg, the young Red-throated Diver is covered with fine soft down feathers. Primarily dark brown to dark grey above, it is slightly paler on the sides of its head and neck, as well as on its throat, chest, and flanks, with a pale grey lower breast and belly. Within weeks, this first down is replaced by a second, paler set of down feathers, which are in turn replaced by developing juvenile feathers.[10]

 

In flight, the Red-throated Diver has a distinctive profile; its small feet do not project far past the end of its body, its head and neck droop below the horizontal (giving the flying bird a distinctly hunchbacked shape) and its thin wings are angled back. It has a quicker, deeper wingbeat than do other divers.[8]

  

[edit] Voice

The adult Red-throated Diver has a number of vocalisations, which are used in different circumstances. In flight, when passing conspecifics or circling its own pond, it gives a series of rapid yet rhythmic goose-like cackles, at roughly five calls per second. Its warning call, if disturbed by humans or onshore predators, is a short croaking bark. A low-pitched moaning call, used primarily as a contact call between mates and between parents and young, but also during copulation, is made with the bill closed. The species also has a short wailing call, which descends slightly in pitch and lasts about a second; due to strong harmonics surrounding the primary pitch, this meowing call is more musical than its other calls. Another call—a harsh, pulsed cooing that rises and falls in pitch, and is typically repeated up to 10 times in a row—is used in territorial encounters and pair-bonding, and by parent birds encouraging their young to move on land between bodies of water.[11] Known as the "long call", it is often given in duet, which is unusual among the divers;[12] the female's contribution is longer and softer than her mate's.[11]

 

Young have a shrill closed-bill call, which they use in begging and to contact their parents. They also have a long call used in response to (and similar to that of) the long call of adults.[11]

  

[edit] Habitat and distribution

The Red-throated Diver breeds primarily in the Arctic regions of northern Eurasia and North America (generally north of 50°N latitude), and winters in northern coastal waters.[13] Unlike other divers, the Red-throated Diver regularly uses very small freshwater lakes as breeding sites.

 

In North America, it winters regularly along both coasts, ranging as far south as the Baja California Peninsula and the Gulf of California in northwestern Mexico; it has been recorded as a vagrant in the interior Mexican state of Hidalgo.[14] In Europe, it breeds in Iceland, northern Scotland, Scandinavia and northern Russia, and winters along the coast as far south as parts of Spain; it also regularly occurs along major inland waterways, including the Mediterranean, Aegean and Black Seas, as well as large river, lakes and reservoirs.[15] It has occurred as a vagrant as far south as Morocco, Tunisia and The Gambia.[1]

 

Some of its folknames in northeastern North America—including cape race, cape brace, cape drake and cape racer, as well as corruptions such as scapegrace—originated from its abundance around Cape Race, Newfoundland.[16]

  

[edit] Behaviour

Because its feet are located so far back on its body, the Red-throated Diver is not capable of walking on land; however, it can use its feet to shove itself forward on its breast.[8] Young use this method of covering ground when moving from their breeding pools to larger bodies of water, including rivers and the sea.[17] It is the only species of diver able to take off directly from land.[18]

 

The Red-throated Diver is a diurnal migrant, which travels singly or in loose groups, often high above the water.[8] In eastern North America (and possibly elsewhere), it tends to migrate near the coast rather than farther offshore.[19] It is a strong flier, and has been clocked at speeds between 75 and 78 kilometres per hour (47–49 mph).[20] Like all members of its family, the Red-throated Diver goes through a simultaneous wing moult, losing all its flight feathers at once and becoming flightless for a period of 3–4 weeks. However, unlike other divers—which undergo this moult in late winter—the Red-throated Diver loses its ability to fly sometime between early August and November.[21]

  

[edit] Food and feeding

Like all members of its family, the Red-throated Diver is primarily a fish-eater, though it sometimes feeds on molluscs, crustaceans, frogs, aquatic invertebrates, insects, fish spawn or even plant material.[22] It seizes rather than spears its prey, which is generally captured underwater.[23] Though it normally dives and swims using only its feet for propulsion, it may use its wings as well if it needs to turn or accelerate quickly.[24] Pursuit dives range from 2–9 metres (6.6–30 ft) in depth, with an average underwater time of about a minute.[22] The fish diet of the Red-throated Diver has led to several of its folknames, including "sprat borer" and "spratoon".[25]

  

Chicks are competent swimmers, able to accompany their parents soon after hatching.For the first few days after hatching, young Red-throated Divers are fed aquatic insects and small crustaceans by both parents. After 3–4 days, the parents switch to fish small enough for the young birds to swallow whole. By four weeks of age, the young can eat the same food—of the same size—as their parents do.[26] Young birds may be fed for some time after fledging; adults have been seen feeding fish to juveniles at sea and on inland lakes in the United Kingdom, hundreds of kilometers from any breeding areas.[27][28]

  

[edit] Breeding

The Red-throated Diver is a monogamous species which forms long-term pair bonds. Both sexes build the nest, which is a shallow scrape (or occasionally a platform of mud and vegetation) lined with vegetation and sometimes a few feathers, and placed within a half-metre (18 in) of the edge of a small pond. The female lays two eggs (though clutches of 1–3 have been recorded); they are incubated for 24–29 days, primarily by the female. The eggs, which are greenish or olive-brownish spotted with black, measure 75 x 46 millimetres (3.0 x 1.8 in) and have a mass of 83 grams (2.9 oz), of which 8 percent is shell.[23][29] Incubation is begun as soon as the first egg is laid, so they hatch asynchronously. The young birds are precocial upon hatching: downy and mobile with open eyes; both parents feed them (small aquatic invertebrates initially, then small fish) for 38–48 days. Parents will perform distraction displays to lure predators away from the nest and young.[23] Ornithologists disagree as to whether adults carry young on their backs while swimming with some maintaining that they do[23] and others the opposite.[30]

  

[edit] Conservation status and threats

 

JuvenileThough the Red-throated Diver is not a globally threatened species, as it has a large population and a significant range, there are populations which appear to be declining. Numbers counted in U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service surveys in Alaska show a 53 percent population decline between 1971 and 1993, for example,[31] and counts have dropped in continental Europe as well.[32] In Scotland, on the other hand, the population increased by some 16 percent between 1994 and 2006, according to surveys done by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds and Scottish Natural Heritage.[32] In 2002, Wetlands International estimated a global population of 490,000 to 1,500,000 individuals; global population trends haven't been quantified.[1]

 

The Red-throated Diver is one of the species to which the Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds (AEWA) applies;[33] in the Americas, it is protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918.[34] Oil spills, habitat degradation, and fishing nets are among the main threats this species faces.[30] In addition, high levels of mercury in the environment have led to reproductive failures in some areas, including parts of Sweden.[35] On the breeding grounds, Arctic and Red Foxes are major predators of eggs,[36] while Great Skuas, Arctic Skuas and various species of Larus gulls (including Great Black-backed Gulls and Glaucous Gulls)[37][38] are predators of both eggs and young.[39]

  

[edit] In human culture

Used as a food source since prehistoric times,[40][41] the Red-throated Diver is still hunted by indigenous peoples in some parts of the world today.[42] Eggs as well as birds are taken, sometimes in significant numbers; during one study on northern Canada's Igloolik Island, 73% of all Red-throated Diver eggs laid within the 10 km2 (3.9 mi2) study site over two breeding seasons were collected by indigenous inhabitants of the island.[43] In some parts of Russia, Red-throated Diver skins were traditionally used to make caps, collars and other clothing trim.[44] The species was also central to the creation mythologies of indigenous groups throughout the Holarctic.[45] According to the myth—which varies only slightly between versions, despite the sometimes-vast distances that separated the groups who believed it—the diver was asked by a great shaman to bring up earth from the bottom of the sea. That earth was then used to build the world's dry land.[45][46]

 

As recently as the 1800s, the Red-throated Diver was thought to be a foreteller of storms; according to the conventional wisdom of the time, birds flying inland or giving short cries predicted good weather, while those flying out to sea or giving long, wailing cries predicted rain.[29][32] In the Orkney and Shetland islands of Scotland, the species is still known as the "rain goose" in deference to its supposed weather-predicting capabilities.[32]

 

Bhutan, Japan and the Union of the Comoros have issued stamps featuring the Red-throated Diver.[47]

  

[edit] References

1.^ a b c BirdLife International (2008). Gavia stellata. 2008 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. IUCN 2008. Retrieved on 2008-10-14.

2.^ a b c Carboneras, p. 162

3.^ Allen, J. A (July 1897). "The Proper Generic Name of the Loons". The Auk 14 (3): 31... . elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Auk/v014n03/p0312-p0313.pdf.

4.^ a b Johnsgard, Paul A. (1987). Diving Birds of North America. University of Nevada–Lincoln. ISBN 0803225660. digitalcommons.unl.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1011&a....

5.^ Simpson, Donald Penistan (1979). Cassell's Latin Dictionary (5 ed.). London: Cassell Ltd. p. 883. ISBN 0-304-52257-0.

6.^ Carboneras 1992, p. 169

7.^ Svensson, Lars; Peter Grant (1999). Collins Bird Guide. London: HarperCollins. pp. 12–13. ISBN 0-00-219728-6.

8.^ a b c d Sibley, David (2000). The Sibley Guide to Birds. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. p. 23. ISBN 0-679-45122-6.

9.^ Cramp 1977, p. 42

10.^ Cramp 1977, p. 49

11.^ a b c Cramp 1977, p. 48

12.^ Carboneras 1992, p. 164

13.^ Carboneras, p.171

14.^ Howell, Steve N. G.; Sophie Webb (1995). A Guide to the Birds of Mexico and Northern Central America. Oxford University Press. p. 92. ISBN 0-19-854012-4.

15.^ Cramp, p. 45

16.^ Cassidy, Frederic Gomes; Hall, Joan Houston (1985). Dictionary of American Regional English. Harvard University Press. p. 539. ISBN 0674205111. books.google.com/books?id=tuLKtLkFshoC&pg=RA1-PA539&a....

17.^ Haviland, Maud D. "On the Method of Progression on Land of a Young Red-throated Diver". British Birds 8 (10): 24... .

18.^ Mead-Waldo, E. G. B. "Habits of the Red-throated Diver". British Birds 16 (6): 172–3.

19.^ Powers, Kevin D.; Jeffrey Cherry. "Loon migrations off the coast of the northeastern United States". Wilson Bulletin 95 (1): 12... . elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Wilson/v095n01/p0125-p0132.pdf.

20.^ Davis, Rolph A. (January 1971). "Flight speed of Arctic and Red-throated Loons". The Auk 88 (1): 169. elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Auk/v088n01/p0169-p0169.pdf.

21.^ Wolfenden, Glen E.. "Selection for a Delayed Simultaneous Wing Molt in Loons (Gaviidae)". The Wilson Bulletin 79 (4): 41... . elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Wilson/v079n04/p0416-p0420.pdf.

22.^ a b Carboneras 1992, p. 171

23.^ a b c d Ehrlich, Paul R.; Dobkin, David S., Wheye, Darryl & Pimm, Stuart L. (1994). The Birdwatcher's Handbook. Oxford University Press. p. 2. ISBN 0-19-858407-5.

24.^ Townsend, Charles W. (July 1909). "The Use of the Wings and Feet by Diving Birds". The Auk 26 (3): 23... . elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Auk/v026n03/p0234-p0248.pdf.

25.^ Cocker, Mark; Mabey, Richard (2005). Birds Britannica. London: Chatto & Windus. p. 3. ISBN 0-701-16907-9.

26.^ Cramp 1977, p. 46

27.^ Hart, Alan S.; Jardine, David C. and Colin Hewitt (June 1998). "Red-throated Diver feeding young in October". British Birds 91 (6): 231.

28.^ Barber, S. C. (June 2002). "Red-throated Diver feeding young in November". British Birds 95 (6): 313.

29.^ a b "Red-throated Diver". British Trust for Ornithology. blx1.bto.org/birdfacts/results/bob20.htm. Retrieved on 2008-06-27.

30.^ a b "All About Birds: Red-throated Loon". Cornell Lab of Ornithology. www.birds.cornell.edu/AllAboutBirds/BirdGuide/Red-throate.... Retrieved on 2008-06-30.

31.^ Groves, Deborah J.; Conant, Bruce; King, Rodney J.; Hodges, John I.; King, James G. (1996). "Status and trends of loon populations summering in Alaska, 1971–1993". The Condor 98 (2): 189–195 . doi:10.2307/1369136. elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Condor/files/issues/v098n02/p0189-p....

32.^ a b c d "Rise in divers mystifies experts". BBC News. news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/scotland/highlands_and_island.... Retrieved on 2007-09-07.

33.^ "Waterbird species to which the Agreement applies". Agreement on the Conservation of African-Eurasian Migratory Waterbirds. www.unep-aewa.org/documents/agreement_text/eng/pdf/aewa_a.... Retrieved on 2008-06-29.

34.^ "Birds Protected by the Migratory Bird Treaty Act". US Fish and Wildlife Service. www.fws.gov/migratorybirds/intrnltr/mbta/mbtandx.html#l. Retrieved on 2008-06-29.

35.^ Eriksson, M.O.G.; Johansson, I. & Ahlgren, C.G. (1992). "Levels of mercury in eggs of red-throated diver Gavia stellata and black-throated diver G. arctica in southwest Sweden" (Abstract). Ornis Svecica 2 (1): 29–36. md1.csa.com/partners/viewrecord.php?requester=gs&coll....

36.^ Schamel, Douglas; Tracy, Diane (Summer 1985). "Replacement Clutches in the Red-throated Loon". Journal of Field Ornithology 56 (3): 28... . elibrary.unm.edu/sora/JFO/v056n03/p0282-p0283.pdf.

37.^ Serle Jnr., W. (January 1936). "Mortality amongst Red-throated Divers". British Birds 29 (1): 81-82.

38.^ Eberl, Christine; Picman, Jaroslav (July–September 1993). "Effect of Nest-site Location on Reproductive Success of Red-throated Loons (Gavia stellata)". The Auk 110 (3): 43... . elibrary.unm.edu/sora/Auk/v110n03/p0436-p0444.pdf.

39.^ Booth, C. J. (January 1978). "Breeding success of Red-throated Divers". British Birds 71 (1): 44.

40.^ Gordon, Bryan C.; Savage, Howard. "Whirl Lake: A Stratified Indian Site Near the Mackenzie Delta". Arctic 27 (3): 17... . pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic27-3-175.pdf.

41.^ Tagliacozzo, Antonio; Gala, Monica (November 2002). "Exploitation of Anseriformes at two Upper Palaeolithic sites in Southern Italy: Grotta Romanelli (Lecce, Apulia) and Grotta del Santuario della Madonna a Praia a Mare (Cosenza, Calabria)". Acta zoologica cracoviensia 45 (special issue): 117-131 . www.isez.pan.krakow.pl/journals/azc_v/pdf/45/09.pdf.

42.^ Bird, Louis; Brown, Jennifer S.H. (2005). Telling Our Stories: Omushkego Legends and Histories from Hudson Bay. Broadview Press. ISBN 1551115808. books.google.com/books?id=Cc9dgTkkfcoC&printsec=front....

43.^ Forbes, Graham; Robertson, Kelly; Ogilvie, Carey; Seddon, Laura (September 1992). "Breeding Densities, Biogeography, and Nest Predation of Birds on Igloolik Island, NWT". Arctic (Peterborough, Ontario) 45 (3): 295-303 . pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/Arctic45-3-295.pdf.

44.^ "Red-throated Loon". Birds of North America Online. Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology and the American Ornithologists' Union. bna.birds.cornell.edu/bna/species/513/articles/conservation. Retrieved on 2008-03-27. (Registration required)

45.^ a b Köngäs, Elli Kaija (Spring 1960). "The Earth-Diver (Th. A 812)". Ethnohistory 7 (2): 15... . www.jstor.org/pss/480754.

46.^ Lutwack, Leonard (1994). Birds in Literature. University Press of Florida. p. 82. ISBN 0813012546.

47.^ Scharning, Kjell. "Stamps showing Red-throated Loon Gavia stellata". Theme Birds on Stamps. www.birdtheme.org/mainlyimages/index.php?spec=1458. Retrieved on 2009-02-13.

 

[edit] Sources

Carboneras, Carles (1992). "Family Gaviidae (Divers)". in Josep del Hoyo, Andrew Elliott & Jordi Sargatal. Handbook of the Birds of the World, Volume 1: Ostrich to Ducks. Barcelona: Lynx Edicions. pp. 162–172 .

Cramp, Stanley, ed (1977). "Gavia stellata Red-throated Diver". Handbook of the Birds of Europe, the Middle East and North Africa: Birds of the Western Palearctic, Volume 1, Ostrich to Ducks. Oxford University Press. pp. 42–49. ISBN 0-19-857358-8.

 

[edit] External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Gavia stellata

 

Red-throated Diver photos on Philadelphia's Academy of Natural Sciences's Visual Resources for Ornithology website

Red-throated Diver videos on Handbook of Birds of the World's Internet Bird Collection website

Red-throated Diver sound recordings on xeno-canto.org's website

Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red-throated_Diver"

Categories: IUCN Red List least concern species | Gaviiformes | Arctic birds | Birds of Europe | Birds of Asia | British Isles coastal fauna | Birds of Italy

New York, 20 September 2017 - Mr. Achim Steiner attends UNGA high-level side event "The EU External Investment Plan (EIP) - Mobilizing EUR 44 billion for the Global Goals". The European Commission jointly with the UNDP will be organising a side event on the European External Investment Plan (EIP) and its role in reaching the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The EIP and its European Fund for Sustainable Development (EFSD) provide a coherent approach to address development challenges, with the main objective of leveraging additional private investments, improving business environments and creating decent jobs. The Administrator is a keynote speaker. © UNDP / Freya Morales

15 September 2020, Rome, Italy - Susanna Moorehead Chair of the OECD's Development Assistance Committee. Virtual Side event at 75th Session of the UN General Assembly “Food Crises and COVID-19: Emerging evidence and implications for action”, Global Network Against Food Crises.

 

Photo credit: ©FAO/Giulio Napolitano. Editorial use only. Copyright ©FAO.

18 September 2017, NYC - UNGA - "The business case for a better world - How companies promote peace, justice and Inclusion". Rt. Hon. Alistair Burt, MP Minister of State for International Development and Minister of State for the Middle East at the Foreign & Commonwealth Office. © UNDP / Freya Morales

Jimmy Wales, Founder of Wikipedia and WikiTribune

Unga, Broken Fingaz

Réunion des Champions du Groupe de réponse à la crise mondiale sur l’alimentation, l’énergie et les finances organisée par le SG/ONU

Le Président de la République est l’un des six champions du Groupe.

Photo : Lionel Mandeix / Présidence

With the Millennium Development Goals coming to a close and the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) under consideration, the international community has a unique opportunity to define the next priorities for global development. Coming on the heels of this year’s United Nations General Assembly meeting, a panel of three development experts discuss key issues that are underrepresented – or missing altogether – on the SDG agenda: climate change, peace and governance, and reproductive health.

 

Read more: www.wilsoncenter.org/event/three-great-ideas-werent-the-u...

 

Foreign Minister Sven Mikser hosting a high level event on Ending Violence Against Children.

New York, 20 September 2017 - Mr. Achim Steiner attends UNGA high-level side event "The EU External Investment Plan (EIP) - Mobilizing EUR 44 billion for the Global Goals". The European Commission jointly with the UNDP will be organising a side event on the European External Investment Plan (EIP) and its role in reaching the UN Sustainable Development Goals. The EIP and its European Fund for Sustainable Development (EFSD) provide a coherent approach to address development challenges, with the main objective of leveraging additional private investments, improving business environments and creating decent jobs. The Administrator is a keynote speaker. © UNDP / Freya Morales

on som body's car..

Signing of diplomatic relations with Foreign Minister of South Sudan Deng Alor Kuol.

Her Excellency, First Lady Mrs Jeannette Kagame attended the Global First Ladies' Alliance and OAFLA strategic planning session, focusing on the work of First Ladies’ offices and their foundations and assessing impactful priorities for a lasting legacy. This session took place in the margins of the 73rd UNGA in New York, USA.

1 2 ••• 35 36 38 40 41 ••• 79 80