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It is also the original source for the name of the Dartford Warbler.
It is home to the smooth snake, the sand lizard and the Dartford warbler.
No mention of private Bill procedure would be complete without mentioning the Dartford warbler.
Like its relatives, the Dartford Warbler is insectivorous, but will also take berries.
Its visual similarity to the Dartford Warbler group is an example of convergent evolution.
The song of the Dartford Warbler is a distinctive rattling warble.
The Dartford Warbler is usually resident all year in its breeding range, but there is some limited migration.
Like many typical warblers, the Dartford Warbler has distinct male and female plumages.
The site supports the sand lizard, smooth snake, woodlark, Dartford warbler and nightjar.
These are small, long tailed, large-headed birds, overall very similar to their close relatives in the Dartford Warbler group.
Dartford warblers, stonechats and yellowhammers breed on the gorse covered hillsides.
Dartford warbler numbers fluctuate dramatically.
Birds such as Dartford warbler, woodlark and stonechat spend the summer flitting from one gorse bush to the next.
The type locality of the Dartford Warbler is Provence in France.
The warning cry is long-pulled, rough tschehr which resembles that of the Dartford Warbler.
He gained his PhD for a classic study on the ecology and conservation of Dartford Warblers.
The Dartford Warbler is a small (13 cm) passerine bird, distinguished by its long tail compared with that of other warblers.
Dartford Warbler - as a mediterranean bird, it can be found in the heather and gorse as these offer relatively warm microclimates for them.
It lists more than 40 endangered species - including the golden eagle, bittern, red kite, corncrake, barn owl, nightjar and Dartford warbler.
An increase in birds has been reported here, including the rare Dartford Warbler and the Cetti's Warbler.
Marmora's Warblers are grey above and below, lacking the brick-red underparts of the Dartford Warbler.
Immature birds can be confused with young Dartford Warblers, which are also grey below, but Marmora's have a paler throat.
Chelmarsh Ringing Group: Photo of hand-held Dartford Warbler.
The area provides a number of important habitats, including for species such as bitterns, marsh harriers, hen harriers, avocets and dartford warblers.
Their aim is to benefit scarce heathland species such as nightjar, woodlark and Dartford warbler, tree pipit and sand lizard.
Visitors may therefore be lucky enough to spot the Dartford warbler (Sylvia undata) or the nightjar (Caprimulgus euuropaeus).
The Dartford Warbler (Sylvia undata) is a typical warbler from the warmer parts of western Europe and northwestern Africa.
Numerous breeding bird colonies can be found, with examples of the Red Data Book species Dartford warbler (Sylvia undata) and peregrine falcon (Falco peregrinus) being recorded on the site.
The gorse provide habitat for the European Stonechat (Saxicola rubicola) and the rare Dartford Warbler (Sylvia undata), which is only present on a few sites in the United Kingdom.
The upland heaths of the west Mendips have recently increased in ornithological importance, due to colonisation by the Dartford Warbler (Sylvia undata), which can be found at Black Down and Crook Peak.
Important populations of heath and woodland birds are found on the forest, notably Dartford Warbler Sylvia undata (the Forest has all-year resident populations of this, Britain's scarcest heathland bird species, which has seen a resurgence since the early 1990s) and Nightjar Caprimulgus europaeus.