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"The Devil's Bird" returns to New York, people are lining up to see it

"The Devil's Bird" returns to New York, people are lining up to

For two weeks, a strange bird has been sitting in the branches of trees at Prospect Park Lake in New York. Scientists think it came from South America. Recently, many people have visited Prospect Park hoping to see the bird up close. The Aninga, a large waterfowl with a snake's neck, has joined a number of other birds that have migrated further north.

Emri i zogut vjen nga gjuha e Indigjenëve Tupi të Brazilit dhe do të thotë “zog i djallit”. Ky zog i veçantë është parë në Nju Jork për herë të parë në vitin 1992. Aninga e veçantë në Bruklin mund të jetë vetëm, por kishte indikacione se Aninga të tjera ndodheshin edhe më në veri. Disa ditë përpara se zogu të dallohej në Parkun Prospect, Timothy Wing vuri re një tjetër Aningë, rreth 180 milje në veri të Nju Jorkut.

Wig said he and his team saw 22 birds and recorded them in eBird, the online bird-watching database. Researchers say the unusual movement in New York is partly due to climate change. "What we're seeing is population movement due to climate," said Andrew Fansworth, a researcher at the Cornell Laboratory. Bird watchers have noticed other unusual feathered visitors to Prospect Park in recent months. "Some of the species include the yellow-bellied warbler, the Akandian flycatcher and others," said Tom Stephenson, a bird watcher in Brooklyn.

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