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Examples
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The Mt. Nimba Reed Frog was one of three species rediscovered in recent weeks, along with the pink-footed Cave Splayfoot salamander in Mexico and the florescent spotted Omaniundu Reed Frog in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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Tens of thousands of pink-footed geese from Iceland leave their overnight roosts on the mudflats at dawn, heading inland in huge V-shaped formations to feast on the remains of the beet harvest.
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The Mt. Nimba Reed Frog was one of three species rediscovered in recent weeks, along with the pink-footed Cave Splayfoot salamander in Mexico and the florescent spotted Omaniundu Reed Frog in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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The Mt. Nimba Reed Frog was one of three species rediscovered in recent weeks, along with the pink-footed Cave Splayfoot salamander in Mexico and the florescent spotted Omaniundu Reed Frog in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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Watch tens of thousands of pink-footed geese at the RSPB's Big Pink Breakfasts in Snettisham, Norfolk.
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The Mt. Nimba Reed Frog was one of three species rediscovered in recent weeks, along with the pink-footed Cave Splayfoot salamander in Mexico and the florescent spotted Omaniundu Reed Frog in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
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We have intelligence that 50,000 pink-footed geese have arrived and are roosting on the island, and we are on our way to see them.
Wildwood Roger Deakin 2009
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Outside again in the fine, drizzling rain, we climb to the highest point on the island just behind the hut and gaze down over the marshes and the long beach across the sea to the northern horizon the pink-footed geese have so recently crossed in their migration.
Wildwood Roger Deakin 2009
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We have intelligence that 50,000 pink-footed geese have arrived and are roosting on the island, and we are on our way to see them.
Wildwood Roger Deakin 2009
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Outside again in the fine, drizzling rain, we climb to the highest point on the island just behind the hut and gaze down over the marshes and the long beach across the sea to the northern horizon the pink-footed geese have so recently crossed in their migration.
Wildwood Roger Deakin 2009
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