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ERROR : Server Busy(-1105) Lesser Kestrel Surfbirds News: BirdLife International Archives
 
 African Swallow-tailed Kite
 Chelictinia riocourii
 ??? one of the largest bird of prey roosts ever found.
 
 
 Lesser Kestrel ?? Kit Day
 “One evening, I saw the passage of some 300 birds flying over,” said Philippe Pilard of LPO, who discovered the site in January 2007. “The next evening I saw 1,300 falcons fly over. I therefore decided to follow them, which was only possible on foot.”
 “I first walked 10 kilometres -even crossing rivers by canoe- and finally found the Lesser Kestrel roost, along with the African Swallow-tailed Kites.”
 The existence of communal roosts during the non-breeding season -sometimes involving several thousand individuals- has been observed in a number of different countries including Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso and Niger. However conservationists have described this enormous roost -altogether some 45,000 insectivorous raptors- as exceptional.
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