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Kākāpō live on three protected islands: Codfish Island/Whenua Hou – 1,396 ha. Whenua Hou is a nature reserve 3 km west of Stewart Island/Rakiura. Te Hauturu-o-Toi/Little Barrier Island – 3,083 ha. Hauturu is a nature reserve 80 km north-east of Auckland City. Anchor Island – 1,140 ha. Läs mer

In 2020, conservationists were proud to announce a more than four-fold increase in the number of kakapos. These are truly one of a kind creatures! Ground-dwelling, nocturnal birds, they are the world's heaviest living parrots, weighing up to almost nice pounds. Läs mer

The best current estimates suggest there are around 650 wild adult gharials left on Earth. Läs mer

“If they didn't have transmitters on, they would probably be extinct now, or close to it,” says Andrew Digby, a kakapo scientist for the New Zealand department of conservation. The transmitters have made it possible to keep birds away from predators, and to manage their breeding. Scientists also started using drones. Läs mer

A related species, the imperial woodpecker (C. imperialis) of Mexico, is the largest woodpecker in the world. It is critically endangered and possibly extinct. All these birds appear to require large trees and isolation from disturbance. Läs mer

Sweden SE, is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Sweden. Läs mer

Registering a .de Domain Choose a Domain. Check Availability. Choose a Provider. Register your domain. Läs mer

What is Software Engineering (SE)? SE deals with building and maintaining software systems. It is more software-oriented and has a greater emphasis on large software applications than Computer Engineering. Läs mer

Tracing the Original Sender of an Email To trace the IP address of the original email sender, head to the first Received in the full email header. Alongside the first Received line is the IP address of the server that sent the email. Sometimes, this appears as X-Originating-IP or Original-IP. Läs mer

Inuit are culturally and biologically distinguishable from neighbouring Indigenous groups including Native Americans and the Sami of northern Europe. Studies comparing Eskimo-Aleut languages to other North American Indigenous languages indicate that the former arose separately from the latter. Läs mer

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