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Richard Noske
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Note on two sight records of the Yellow-rumped-Flycatcher on Bali Bas van Balen; Richard Noske
KUKILA Vol. 5 No. 2 (1991)
Publisher : Indonesian Ornithologists’ Union

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Shining Bronze Cuckoo and Channel-billed Cuckoo: First records for Timor Richard Noske
KUKILA Vol. 7 No. 1 (1994)
Publisher : Indonesian Ornithologists’ Union

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Understorey birds of Cikaniki Research Station, Gunung Halimun-Salak National Park, West Java: Report of the Indonesian Bird Banding Scheme Training Programme Richard Noske; Dewi M Prawiradilaga; David Drynan; Alan Leishman; William Rutherford
KUKILA Vol. 15 (2011)
Publisher : Indonesian Ornithologists’ Union

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This report summarises findings from the first Training of Trainers (ToT) programme of the Indonesian Bird Banding Scheme (IBBS), which took place at Cikaniki Research Station (1000- 1100 m asl), Gunung Halimun-Salak National Park, during July 2009, and compares them with the results of previous banding studies conducted at the site by PPB-LIPI staff since 1996. Over the seven days from 13 to 19 July 2009, a total of 97 individuals representing 29 species were captured, and in most cases, banded. Juvenile birds belonging to 13 species comprised 28% of all individuals captured, and early primary moult was found on 32% of adults captured, suggesting that many species had recently completed breeding. The two most frequently captured species were the Little Spiderhunter Arachnothera longirostra and the Javan Fulvetta Alcippe pyrrhoptera. A comparison with previous banding studies between 1996 and 2002 at the same site shows that the latter species was repeatedly misidentified as the Fulvous-chested Jungle Flycatcher Rhinomyias olivacea, a species otherwise unknown for the park. This finding negates the conclusions of previous reports that R. olivacea is an important component of the understorey avifauna of the park at this altitude. Nine individuals, representing six species, were recaptured during the IBBS programme, including a Sunda Forktail Enicurus velatus that was at least 9 years old when re-trapped, and a Horsfield’s Babbler Malacocincla sepiaria that was at least 8.75 years old.
Around the Archipelago Bas van Balen; Richard Noske; Adam A Supriatna
KUKILA Vol. 15 (2011)
Publisher : Indonesian Ornithologists’ Union

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Summary of Recent Literature 2008-2010 Bas van Balen; Colin Trainor; Richard Noske; Adam A Supriatna
KUKILA Vol. 15 (2011)
Publisher : Indonesian Ornithologists’ Union

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A Mist-netting Study of Birds in Lunang Freshwater Swamp Forest, West Sumatra – Part 1 Wilson Novarino; Richard Noske; Anas Salsabila; Jarulis .
KUKILA Vol. 13 (2006)
Publisher : Indonesian Ornithologists’ Union

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The diversity and guild composition of birds in Lunang freshwater swamp forest, 250 km south of Padang, West Sumatra, was investigated in April-June 2001 using mist nets over 15 days (l 368 net-h) and 20-species list censuses (120 h). A total of 154 individuals belonging to 40 species were captured. Alcedo meninting was the most frequently captured species, followed by Trichastoma rostratum , Macronous gularis, Anthreptes singalensis, and Arachnothera longirostra. Of the nine foraging guilds represented among captured birds, foliagegleaning insectivores were overwhelmingly dominant in terms of both species and individuals. Of 14 families, Timaliidae and Nectariniidae contributed the most to the total number of captured individuals. Including the 70 species recorded only during censuses, 110 species were observed in Lunang swamp forest. Six species were encountered only in mist-nets, indicating the usefulness of this technique in obtaining comprehensive species inventories, especially when experience of calls is limited. Total capture rates were higher than those reported in Peninsular Malaysia and Sarawak, but inter-regional comparisons are constrained by differences in sampling effort, design and habitats.
A Mist-netting Study of Birds in Lunang Freshwater Swamp Forest, West Sumatra – Part 2 Wilson Novarino; Richard Noske; Anas Salsabila; Jarulis .
KUKILA Vol. 13 (2006)
Publisher : Indonesian Ornithologists’ Union

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The diversity and guild composition of birds in Lunang freshwater swamp forest, 250 km south of Padang, West Sumatra, was investigated in April-June 2001 using mist nets over 15 days (l 368 net-h) and 20-species list censuses (120 h). A total of 154 individuals belonging to 40 species were captured. Alcedo meninting was the most frequently captured species, followed by Trichastoma rostratum , Macronous gularis, Anthreptes singalensis, and Arachnothera longirostra. Of the nine foraging guilds represented among captured birds, foliagegleaning insectivores were overwhelmingly dominant in terms of both species and individuals. Of 14 families, Timaliidae and Nectariniidae contributed the most to the total number of captured individuals. Including the 70 species recorded only during censuses, 110 species were observed in Lunang swamp forest. Six species were encountered only in mist-nets, indicating the usefulness of this technique in obtaining comprehensive species inventories, especially when experience of calls is limited. Total capture rates were higher than those reported in Peninsular Malaysia and Sarawak, but inter-regional comparisons are constrained by differences in sampling effort, design and habitats.
Around the Archipelago Bas van Balen; Richard Noske
KUKILA Vol. 13 (2006)
Publisher : Indonesian Ornithologists’ Union

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Hunting of a very large aggregation of Eyebrowed Thrushes Turdus obscurus in Sumatra Muhammad Iqbal; . Ajiman; Richard Noske; Doni Setiawan
KUKILA Vol. 17 No. 2 (2014)
Publisher : Indonesian Ornithologists’ Union

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Around the Archipelago Bas van Balen; Colin Trainor; Richard Noske
KUKILA Vol. 17 No. 1 (2013)
Publisher : Indonesian Ornithologists’ Union

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